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Jataka tales

Chapter 20: XV. THE OX WHO ENVIED THE PIG
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About This Book

A collection of traditional birth-stories from the Buddhist canon retold for young readers, presenting short, self-contained animal fables and moral parables. Each tale stages tricks, tests of courage, acts of sacrifice, and everyday dilemmas, and closes with an explicit ethical point about kindness, prudence, and selflessness. The narratives feature animals and human figures in riverside and forest settings—monkeys, crocodiles, turtles, deer, merchants and elephants—offered in plain language with occasional illustrations, making ancient folktales accessible for children and suitable for classroom reading or moral instruction.

XV.
THE OX WHO ENVIED THE PIG

Once upon a time there was an Ox named Big Red. He had a younger brother named Little Red. These two brothers did all the carting on a large farm.

Now the farmer had an only daughter and she was soon to be married. Her mother gave orders that the Pig should be fattened for the wedding feast.

Little Red noticed that the Pig was fed on choice food. He said to his brother, "How is it, Big Red, that you and I are given only straw and grass to eat, while we do all the hard work on the farm? That lazy Pig does nothing but eat the choice food the farmer gives him."

Said his brother, "My dear Little Red, envy him not. That little Pig is eating the food of death! He is being fattened for the wedding feast. Eat your straw and grass and be content and live long."

Little Red noticed that the Pig was fed on choice food.

The fattened Pig was killed and cooked for the wedding feast.

Not long afterwards the fattened Pig was killed and cooked for the wedding feast.

Then Big Red said, "Did you see, Little Red, what became of the Pig after all his fine feeding?"

"Yes," said the little brother, "we can go on eating plain food for years, but the poor little Pig ate the food of death and now he is dead. His feed was good while it lasted, but it did not last long."