<h2 id='chap19'>HOW THE ANTELOPE WAS CAUGHT</h2>
<p class='c004'>Once upon a time the King of Benares
had a gardener named Sanjaya. Now,
a swift antelope who had come to the garden
took to flight as soon as it saw Sanjaya. But
Sanjaya did not frighten it away; and when
it had come again and again it began to walk
about in the garden. And day by day the
gardener used to pluck the various fruits and
flowers in the garden and take them away to
the King.</p>
<p>Now, one day the King asked him: “I say,
friend gardener, is there anything strange in
the garden so far as you’ve noticed?”</p>
<p>“I’ve noticed nothing, O King, save that an
antelope is in the habit of coming and wandering
about there. That I often see.”</p>
<p>“But could you catch it?”</p>
<p>“If I had a little honey I could bring it
right inside the palace here!”</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page_126'></SPAN>The King gave him the honey; and he took
it, went to the garden, smeared it on the grass
at the spot the antelope frequented, and hid
himself. When the deer came and had eaten
the honey-smeared grass, it was bound with
the lust of taste; and from that time went
nowhere else, but came exclusively to the
garden. And as the gardener saw that it was
allured by the honey-smeared grass, he in due
course showed himself. For a few days the
antelope took to flight on seeing him. But
after seeing him again and again it acquired
confidence, and gradually came to eat grass
from the gardener’s hand. And when the
gardener saw that its confidence was gained,
he strewed the path right up to the palace as
thick with branches as if he were covering it
with mats, hung a gourdful of honey over his
shoulder, carried a bundle of grass at his waist,
and then kept sprinkling honey-smeared grass
in front of the antelope till he led him within
the palace.</p>
<p>As soon as the deer had got inside, they
shut the door. The antelope, seeing men,
began to tremble and quake with the fear of
<SPAN name='Page_127'></SPAN>death, and ran hither and thither about the
hall. The King came down from his upper
chamber, and, seeing the trembling creature,
said: “Such is the nature of an antelope, that
it will not go for a week afterwards to a place
where it has seen men, nor its life long to a
place where it has been frightened. Yet this
one, with just such a disposition, and accustomed
only to the jungle, has now, bound by
the lust of taste, come to just such a place.
Verily, there is nothing worse in the world than
this lust of taste!”</p>
<p>And when in other words he had shown
the danger of greed, he let the antelope go
back to the forest.</p>
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