Rich Men with Inexhaustible Resources – 2293
the unsellable merchandise in a single day. When the merchant returned home
and saw none of his unsellable goods, he asked the boy: “Son, have you
destroyed all those goods?” Jaṭila replied: “No, I did not destroy them. I have
sold them at the prices you stated. Here are the
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accounts, and here is the
money.” His adoptive father was highly pleased. “This boy has the making of a
successful man. He is an invaluable asset of a man,” thus reflected the merchant.
Accordingly, he married his grown up daughter to Jaṭila. Then, he had a big
house built for the couple. When the construction of the house was completed,
he presented it to the couple for their residence.
Jaṭila, Lord of the Golden Hill
When Jaṭila took occupancy of his house, as soon as he put his foot at the
threshold of the house, a golden hill 80 cubits high suddenly appeared through
the earth at the back of the house. On learning the news of Jaṭila’s immense
fortune, the king conferred on him the position of Royal Treasurer, sending him
the white umbrella and the paraphernalia of the Treasurer’s office. From then
onwards, he was known as Jaṭila, the Treasurer.
Jaṭila had three sons. When they had grown to adulthood, he had a desire to
become a monastic. But he also had the duty to the king as treasurer. If there
were to exist in Jambudīpa another rich man who was equal in wealth to him, he
might be released by the king so that he could join the Saṅgha. Otherwise, he
had no chance to become a monastic. So, he had a gold brick, a gold goad and a
pair of gold slippers made, which he entrusted to his men, saying: “My men, go
around Jambudīpa taking these articles with you and enquire about the existence
or otherwise of a rich man whose wealth is equal to mine.”
Jaṭila’s men went around the country and reached the town of Bhaddiya where
they met Meṇḍaka the rich man, who asked them: “Men, what is your business
in touring this place?”
“We are touring the country to find something,” said Jaṭila’s men. Meṇḍaka,
seeing the gold brick, the gold goad and the pair of gold slippers which the
visitors were carrying with them, rightly surmised that the men were making
enquires about the wealth of the country. So he said to them: “Men, go and see
at the back of my house.”
Jaṭila’s men saw at the back of Meṇḍaka’s house an area of about fourteen acres
packed with golden goat statues of the sizes of a bull or a horse or an elephant.