Village Folk-tales of Ceylon (Sri Lanka), vol. 1-3

by Henry Parker | 1910 | 406,533 words

This folk-tale entitled “the foolish prince” is gathered from oral sources sources, tracing its origin to ancient Ceylon (Sri Lanka). These tales are often found to contain similarities from stories from Buddhism and Hinduism. This is the story nr. 191 from the collection “stories of the lower castes”.

Story 191 - The Foolish Prince

AT a certain city there were a Prince and a Princess.

One day when the two are staying talking and talking, the Princess says,

“Lord, please tell a story for me to hear,”

she said.

Then the Prince said,

“It is good. I know a story that no one knows; I will tell you it,”

and beginning it he told the story.

At the time when he was telling it a Brahmana was listening. The Brahmana having gone away, said to the Brahmana’s wife,

“I know a story.”

Then the woman said,

“If so, tell the story, for me to hear it.”

The Brahmana told the story.

The Brahmana’s wife also learning it, having come on the following day told the story to that Princess. The Princess asked the Brahmana’s wife,

“Who told you this ?”

Then the woman said falsely,

“I leamt it [some time] previously.”

Well then, this Princess having said [to herself],

“My Prince is indeed associated with this woman. If not, how does this woman know to-day the story which my Prince told yesterday for me to hear ?”

and having become angry with the Prince, the Princess also associated with another Prince. This Prince, ascertaining this, killed the Princess.

In no long time after that, the thought having occurred to the Prince,

“If my Princess were [here] it would be good for me,”

having walked throughout the whole of Lankawa (Ceylon) he looked where the Princess is now.[1]

One day, this Prince asked another man,

“Did you see my Princess ?”

At that time the [other] Prince said,

“I saw that the Princess was staying yesterday in the daytime in the midst of such and such a forest.”

Well then, this Prince, asking and asking the way, having gone to the midst of the forest, at the time when he was walking in it a bear having bitten the Prince he died.

Washerman. North-western Province.

 

Note:

In the Katha Sarit Sagara (Tawney), vol. i, p. 4, it is stated that when the God Siva was relating a story to his wife Parvati, one of his dependants, a Gana named Pushpadanta, entered unseen by his magic power, and listened to it. Afterwards he related it to his wife Jaya, who recited it in the presence of Parvati, whereupon the Goddess lost her temper, reproached Siva for telling her an old story known by others, and when she heard from him the true explanation, cursed Pushpadanta and turned him into a mortal.

Footnotes and references:

[1]:

Apparently, he thought she would be reborn on the earth again, with her former appearance.

Like what you read? Consider supporting this website: