42: The Attributes of the Three Treasures – 1702
illustrates it with the story of a rustic old man. The story is related below
for general knowledge.
The Story of a Rustic Old Man
A rustic old man was drinking in a liquor shop in town. A group of swindlers
joined him and conspired between themselves to divest the old man of his
possessions by trickery. They agreed among themselves: “We shall relate our
experiences each in turn. Anyone who says he does not believe it will lose all his
possessions to the story-teller and also become his slave.” And they said to the
old man: “Grand uncle, do you agree to this proposition?” The old man replied:
“So be it boys, so be it.”
Then the first town dweller at the drinking party related his story thus: “Friends,
when my mother conceived me, she had a particular longing to eat wood apple.
And as she had no one to pick the fruit for her she sent me to pick a wood apple.
Then I who was in my mother’s womb, went to a wood apple tree. As I could not
climb up the tree, I took hold of my two legs and threw them upwards into the
tree as I would a wooden club. Then I went from one bough to the other and
picked the wood apples. After that I found myself unable to climb down the tree
and so I went back home, took a ladder and used it to get down. I gave the fruit,
to my mother. They were of a size as big as a water pot.
All the wood apples were carried down the tree in my pouch fashioned from the
loin cloth I was wearing. Out of my gathering of wood apples my mother ate 60
of them at one sitting till she satisfied herself with the special longing during
conception. The remainder of the fruit, after my mother had eaten, were for
distribution to all the villagers, both young and old. The front room of our house
is sixteen cubits wide, we stored the wood apples in it after removing all
furniture from there. The fruit filled the room to the roof. The surplus fruit had
to be piled up outside the house and it was as high as a hillock of 80 cubits high.
Now, friends, what do you say? Do you believe the story or not?”
[1115]
The rustic old man remained silent. The town folks at the drinking party
answered in the positive. Then they asked the old man: “Do you believe the
story?” The old man replied: “Well, this is a vast country. It is believable in this
vast country.”