The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 67: The Cruel Crane Outwitted
A tailor who used to make robes for the brotherhood was wont to cheat his customers,
and thus prided himself on being smarter than other men.
But once, on entering upon an important business transaction with a stranger,
he found his master in fraudulent practices, and suffered a heavy loss. [1]
And the Blessed One said:
"This is not an isolated incident in the greedy tailor's gate;
in other incarnations he suffered similar losses,
and by trying to dupe others ultimately ruined himself. [2]
"This same greedy character lived many generations ago as a crane near a pond,
and when the dry season set in he said to the fishes with a bland voice:
'Are you not anxious for your future welfare?
There is at present very little water and still less food in this pond.
What will you do should the whole pond become dry, in this drought." [3]
"'Yes, indeed' said the fishes, 'what should we do?' [4]
"Replied the crane:
'I know a fine, large lake, which never becomes dry.
Would you not like me to carry you there in my beak?'
When the fishes began to distrust the honesty of the crane,
he proposed to have one of them sent over to the lake to see it;
and a big carp at last decided to take the risk for the sake of the others,
and the crane carried him to a beautiful lake and brought him back in safety.
Then all doubt vanished, and the fishes gained confidence in the crane,
and now the crane took them one by one out of the pond
and devoured them on a big varana-tree. [5]
"There was also a lobster in the pond,
and when it listed the crane to eat him too, he said:
'I have taken all the fishes away and put them in a fine, large lake.
Come along. I shall take thee, too!' [6]
"'But how wilt thou hold me to carry me along?' asked the lobster. [7]
"'I shall take hold of thee with my beak,' said the crane. [8]
"'Thou wilt let me fall if thou carry me like that.
I will not go with thee!' replied the lobster. [9]
"'Thou needest not fear,' rejoined the crane;
'I shall hold thee quite tight all the way.' [10]
"Then the lobster said to himself:
'If this crane once gets hold of a fish, he will certainly never let him go in a lake!
Now if he should really put me into the lake it would be splendid;
but if he does not, then I will cut his throat and kill him!'
So he said to the crane: 'Look here, friend,
thou wilt not be able to hold me tight enough;
but we lobsters have a famous grip.
If thou wilt let me catch hold of thee round the neck with my claws,
I shall be glad to go with thee.' [11]
"The crane did not see that the lobster was trying to outwit him, and agreed.
So the lobster caught hold of his neck with his claws as securely
as with a pair of blacksmith's pincers, and called out:
'Ready, ready, go!' [12]
"The crane took him and showed him the lake,
and then turned off toward the varana-tree.
'My dear uncle!' cried the lobster, 'The lake lies that way,
but thou art taking me this other way.' [13]
"Answered the crane: 'Thinkest thou so? Am I thy dear uncle?
Thou meanest me to understand, I suppose, that I am thy slave,
who has to lift thee up and carry thee about with him, where thou pleasest!
Now cast thine eye upon that heap of fish-bones at the root of yonder varana-tree.
Just as I have eaten those fish, every one of them, just so will I devour thee also!' [14]
"Ah! those fishes get eaten through their own stupidity,' answered the lobster,
'but I am not going to let thee kill me.
On the contrary, it is thou that I am going to destroy.
For thou, in thy folly, hast not seen that I have outwitted thee.
If we die, we both die together;
for I will but off this head of thine and cast it to the ground!'
So saying, he gave the crane's neck a pinch with his claws as with a vise. [15]
"Then gasping, and with tears trickling from his eyes,
and trembling with the fear of death,
the crane besought the lobster, saying:
'O, my Lord! indeed I did not intend to eat thee.
Grant me my life!' [16]
"Very well! fly down and put me into the lake,' replied the lobster. [17]
"And the crane turned round and stepped down into the lake,
to place the lobster on the mud at its edge.
Then the lobster cut the crane's neck through as clean
as one would cut a lotus-stalk with a hunting-knife,
and then entered the water!" [18]
When the Teacher had finished this discourse, he added:
"Not now only was this man outwitted in this way,
but in other existences, too, by his own intrigues." [19]
Continue Reading
- The Gospel of Buddha: Preface
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 01: Rejoice
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 02: Samsara and Nirvana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 03: Truth the Saviour
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 04: The Bodhisatta's Birth
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 05: The Ties of Life
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 06: The Three Woes
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 07: The Bodhisatta's Renunciation
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 08: King Bimbisara
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 09: The Bodhisatta's Search
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 10: Uruvela, the Place of Mortification
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 11: Mara, the Evil One
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 12: Enlightenment
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 13: The First Converts
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 14: Brahma's Request
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 15: Upaka
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 16: The Sermon at Benares
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 17: The Sangha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 18: Yasa, the Youth of Benares
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 19: Kassapa
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 20: The Sermon at Rajagaha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 21: The King's Gift
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 22: Sariputta and Moggallana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 23: Anathapindika
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 24: The Sermon on Charity
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 25: Jetavana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 26: The Three Characteristics and the Uncreate
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 27: The Buddha's Father
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 28: Yasodhara
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 29: Rahula
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 30: Jivaka, the Physician
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 31: The Buddha's Parents Attain Nirvana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 32: Women Admitted to the Sangha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 33: The Bhikkhus' Conduct Toward Women
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 34: Visakha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 35: The Uposatha and Patimokkha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 36: The Schism
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 37: The Re-establishment of Concord
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 38: The Bhikkhus Rebuked
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 39: Devadatta
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 40: Name and Form
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 41: The Goal
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 42: Miracles Forbidden
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 43: The Vanity of Worldliness
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 44: Secrecy and Publicity
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 45: The Annihilation of Suffering
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 46: Avoiding the Ten Evils
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 47: The Preacher's Mission
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 48: The Dhammapada
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 49: The Two Brahmans
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 50: Guard the Six Quarters
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 51: Simha's Question Concerning Annihilation
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 52: All Existence is Spiritual
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 53: Identity and Non-Identity
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 54: The Buddha Omnipresent
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 55: One Essence, One Law, One Aim
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 56: The Lesson Given to Rahula
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 57: The Sermon on Abuse
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 58: The Buddha Replies to the Deva
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 59: Words of Instruction
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 60: Amitabha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 61: The Teacher Unknown
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 62: Parables
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 63: The Widow's Two Mites and the Parable of the Three Merchants
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 64: The Man Born Blind
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 65: The Lost Son
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 66: The Giddy Fish
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 67: The Cruel Crane Outwitted
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 68: Four Kinds of Merit
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 69: The Light of the World
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 70: Luxurious Living
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 71: The Communication of Bliss
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 72: The Listless Fool
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 73: Rescue in the Desert
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 74: The Sower
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 75: The Outcast
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 76: The Woman at the Well
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 77: The Peacemaker
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 78: The Hungry Dog
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 79: The Despot
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 80: Vasavadatta
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 81: The Marriage-Feast in Jambunada
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 82: A Party in Search of a Thief
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 83: In the Realm of Yamaraja
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 84: The Mustard Seed
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 85: Following the Master Over the Stream
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 86: The Sick Bhikkhu
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 87: The Patient Elephant
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 88: The Conditions of Welfare
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 89: Sariputta's Faith
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 90: Pataliputta
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 91: The Mirror of Truth
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 92: Ambapali
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 93: The Buddha's Farewell Address
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 94: The Buddha Announces His Death
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 95: Chunda, the Smith
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 96: Metteyya
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 97: The Buddha's Final Entering into Nirvana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 98: The Three Personalities of the Buddha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 99: The Purpose of Being
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 100: The Praise of All the Buddhas