Jataka Vol. II: Book III. Tika-Nipāta: No. 270. Ulūka-Jātaka
No. 270.
ULŪKA-JĀTAKA.
"The owl is King," etc.--This story the Master told while living at Jetavana,
about a quarrel between Crows and Owls.
At the period in question, the Crows used to eat Owls during the day, and at
night, the Owls flew about, nipping off the heads of the Crows as they slept,
and thus killing them. There was a certain brother who lived in a cell on the
outskirts of Jetavana. When the time came for sweeping, there used to be a
quantity of crows' heads to throw away, which had dropt from the tree, enough to
fill seven or eight potties. He told this to the brethren. In the Hall of Truth
the Brethren began to talk about it. "Friend, Brother So-and-so finds over so
many crows' heads to throw away every day in the place where he lives!" [352]
The Master came in, and asked what they were talking about as they sat together.
They told him. They went on to ask how long it was since the Crows and Owls fell
a-quarrelling. The Master replied, "Since the time of the first age of the
world;" and then he told them an old-world tale.
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Once upon a time, the people who lived in the first cycle of the world gathered
together, and took for their king a certain man, handsome, auspicious,
commanding, altogether perfect. The quadrupeds also gathered, and chose for king
the Lion; and the fish in the ocean chose them a fish called Ānanda. Then all
the birds in the Himalayas assembled upon a flat rock, crying,
"Among men there is a king, and among the beasts, and the fish have one too; but
amongst us birds king there is none. We should not live in anarchy; we too
should choose a king. Fix on some one fit to be set in the king's place!"
They searched about for such a bird, and chose the Owl; "Here is the bird we
like," said they. And a bird made proclamation three times to all that there
would be a vote taken on this matter. After patiently hearing this announcement
twice, on the third time up rose a Crow, and cried out,
"Stay now! If that is what he looks like when he is being consecrated king, what
will he look like when he is angry? If he only looks at us in anger, we shall be
scattered like sesame seeds thrown on a hot
p. 243
plate. I don't want to make this fellow king!" and enlarging upon this he
uttered the first stanza:--[353]
"The owl is king, you say, o'er all bird-kind:
With your permission, may I speak my mind?"
The Birds repeated the second, granting him leave to speak:--
"You have our leave, Sir, so it be good and right:
For other birds are young, and wise, and bright."
Thus permitted, he repeated the third:--
"I like not (with all deference be it said)
To have the Owl anointed as our Head.
Look at his face! if this good humour be,
What will he do when he looks angrily?"
Then he flew up into the air, cawing out "I don't like it! I don't like it!" The
Owl rose and pursued him. Thenceforward those two nursed enmity one towards
another. And the birds chose a golden Goose for their king, and dispersed.
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[354] When the Master had ended this discourse, he declared the Truths and
identified the Birth:--"At that time, the wild Goose chosen for king was I
myself."
Next: No. 271. Udapāna-Dūsaka-Jātaka
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