Chapter 27
again made a plot to kill the lad in conspiracy with his trusted potter. He therefore went to
the potter and confided to him that there was a stupid son in his house whom he wanted to
do away with secretly by hook or by crook, The potter said: ‚O rich man... you shouldn’t
have uttered such a speech, a speech full of sin.‛
The rich man thought that the potter would not do anything for nothing, and so he paid
him one thousand pieces of money to make him yield to his persuasions. He was successful
because there is no one who will not be corrupted by bribery. The potter accepted the
money and told the rich man: ‚I will arrange for the pot-kilns to be kept ready on such a
such a day, and you might send the boy to me on that date of appointment.‛
The rich man kept on marking time and on the day of appointment, he asked the youth
Ghosaka: ‚My dear son, I require many pots and I have arranged with our potter to supply
them by certain date, you might go now to the potter and ask him to do as he was bid by
me, without any delay.‛ Ghosaka replied: ‚Very well,‛ and left the house.
One's Own Malice brings about One's Own Ruin
On seeing Ghosaka on the road, the rich man's own son came running to him and asked
for help: ‚Elder brother .... I've lost many marbles while playing a game with my play-
mates. I do pray that you try to recover the loss I've sustained.‛ Whereupon, Ghosaka said:
‚I can't do it now, because our father has sent me on an errand.‛ The rich man's own son
made another request: ‚If so, just play for me and recover the lost balls. I will go on the
errand on your behalf.‛ Whereupon, Ghosaka said: ‚In that case, you might go to the
potter's place and convey the message of your father to the potter in minute detail while I
play with the boys to recover the marbles you lost to them.‛
The rich man's son went and conveyed his father's message to the potter, on behalf of
Ghosaka as agreed. The potter said he would carry out his father's orders. He took the boy
into his house and hacked him into pieces with an axe and put the pieces of the dead boy's
body into a mud pot which was later kept along with unbaked mud-pots in the kiln.
Ghosaka lad had won quite a lot of marbles and waited for the return of his younger
brother for a time. When the younger boy failed to turn up, he went to the neighbourhood
of the potter's place to look for him and returned home when no trace of his younger
brother could be found.
The rich man was astonished to see the return of Ghosaka at a distance and was at a loss
to know what had happened. He got up before Ghosaka could even take a seat to explain
the matter. ‚Dear son... did you not go to the potter's place?‛ The youth replied: ‚No,
father, I didn't go.‛ He asked him again: ‚Why did you not go?‛ The youth explained the
reason why he did not go and why the younger brother went there on his behalf, in detail.
The rich man felt as if he was reeling under the weight of the great earth and scolded
him: ‚My dear son, .... what do you mean by that?‛ and so saying he hurried to the place of
the potter with a greatly agitated mind. When he got to the house of the potter, he could not
breathe out full facts of the tragedy and so he simply uttered: ‚Look .. my man, look my
man.‛ But the potter gave him a stiff reply: ‚Rich man ... what do you mean by that... when
it is too late!‛ The rich man had to return home without any further ado. He was reduced to
a mental wreck from that time.
(6) The rich man of KosambÊ did not take meal together with Ghosaka from that
time onwards, and deliberated as to how to do away with his son's rival. He
wrote a note and asked Ghosaka to deliver it to one of his labour supervisors
at a certain village and to tell him verbally that the contents of the note must
be translated into action at once. He also instructed the lad to contact one of
his boyhood friend, a rich man of Gamaka, and stop at his home for the meals
en route to his destination. Ghosaka lad had come of age by that time.
Ghosaka paid respect to the rich man. On arrival at the village of Gamaka, he found his
way to the rich man's house and stood worshipping in front of him. The local rich man was
shaving his beard by the side of a window. When he noticed the lad, he asked: ‚Young man