<h2 id='chap28'>THE POISONOUS TREES</h2>
<p class='c004'>Once upon a time when Brahmadatta was
reigning in Benares, the Bodhisatta was
born a merchant. When he grew up, and was
trading with five hundred wagons, he came
one day to where the road led through a great
forest. Halting at the outskirts, he mustered
the caravan and addressed them thus:—“Poison-trees
grow in this forest. Take heed
that you taste no unfamiliar leaf, flower, or
fruit without first consulting me.” All promised
to take every care; and the journey into
the forest began. Now just within the forest-border
stands a village, and just outside that
village grows a What-fruit tree. That What-fruit
tree exactly resembles a mango alike in
trunk, branch, leaf, flower, and fruit. And
not only in outward semblance, but also in
taste and smell, the fruit—ripe and unripe—mimics
the mango. If eaten, it is a deadly
poison, and causes instant death.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page_186'></SPAN>Now some greedy fellows, who went on
ahead of the caravan, came to this tree and,
taking it to be a mango, ate of its fruit. But
others said, “Let us ask our leader before we
eat”; and they accordingly halted by the tree,
fruit in hand, till he came up. Perceiving
that it was no mango, he said:—“This 'mango’
is a What-fruit tree; don’t touch its fruit.”</p>
<p>Having stopped them from eating, the
Bodhisatta turned his attention to those who
had already eaten. First he dosed them with
an emetic, and then he gave them the four
sweet foods to eat; so that in the end they
recovered.</p>
<p>Now on former occasions caravans had
halted beneath this same tree, and had died
from eating the poisonous fruit which they
mistook for mangoes. On the morrow the
villagers would come, and seeing them lying
there dead, would fling them by the heels into
a secret place, departing with all the belongings
of the caravan, wagons and all.</p>
<p>And on the day too of our story these
villagers failed not to hurry at daybreak to
the tree for their expected spoils. “The oxen
<SPAN name='Page_187'></SPAN>must be ours,” said some. “And we’ll have
the wagons,” said others;—whilst others
again claimed the wares as their share. But
when they came breathless to the tree, there
was the whole caravan alive and well!</p>
<p>“How came you to know this was not a
mango tree?” demanded the disappointed villagers.
“We didn’t know,” said they of the
caravan; “it was our leader who knew.”</p>
<p>So the villagers came to the Bodhisatta and
said, “Man of wisdom, what did you do to
find out this tree was not a mango?”</p>
<p>“Two things told me,” replied the Bodhisatta,
and he repeated this stanza:—</p>
<div class='lg-container-l c011'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“When near a village grows a tree</div>
<div class='line'>Not hard to climb, ’tis plain to me,</div>
<div class='line'>Nor need I further proof to know,</div>
<div class='line'>—No wholesome fruit thereon can grow!”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c012'>And having taught the Truth to the assembled
multitude, he finished his journey in
safety.</p>
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