
The Jackal And The Leopard
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Henry Parker
Village Folk-Tales of Ceylon, Volume 1
Luzac And Co., London
1910
Sri Lanka
The Jackal And The Leopard: cunning weaker beast outwits stronger predator
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a
The Jackal And The Leopard
In a certain country there is a Gamarala. There is a goat-fold of the Gamarala's. At that goat-fold one by one the goats are disappearing during the night. Afterwards the Gamarala having gone there [to watch for the thief] went to sleep. In the hand of the Gamarala there was a lump of salt chillies.
Afterwards the Leopard came at night. The Leopard lifting each goat looks at it. Having looked, afterwards having lifted up the Gamarala [and found he was the heaviest] he took him. Carrying him away he took him to his rock cave. Then the Gamarala quickly [entered it, and] shut the door. The Leopard then was trying to go into the cave. Having heard the uproar the Jackal Panditaya came. "What is this, Sapu-flowers' Minister, you are doing?" he asked.
"In other years I brought goats [and ate them without trouble]. That one having entered the cave has shut the door."
"You, Sir, having put your tail inside the cave be pleased to wave it," he said; the Jackal Panditaya said. "Do not catch hold of the tail," he said [to the Gamarala]. "Otherwise, having put thy foot against the wall, and having folded it two-fold or three-fold, hold it [fast]," he said. "Do not jam a little of the golden salt chillies under the tail of the Sapu-flowers' Minister," he said.
Then the Gamarala having seized the tail jammed in the salt chillies. Afterwards the Sapu-flowers' Minister pulling out his tail bounded away. Having bounded off and gone, he sat down on a flat rock. Afterwards the Jackal Panditaya asked, "What are you on that flat rock for?"
"I am looking if this country is fruitful or unfruitful," he said.
Again, the Gamarala, saving his life, went to the village. The Jackal Panditaya went to the Gamarala. "What is it, Gamarala? Couldn't you kill him?"
"While he was outside how could I, sitting in the cave, kill him?"
"I will tell you a trick for that one," the Jackal Panditaya said. Afterwards he said, "You must make a trap for that one," he said.
"Where shall I make the trap?" [the Gamarala] asked.
"At the fence of the goat-fold," he said.
Afterwards he made the trap. The Sapu-flowers' Minister was noosed in the trap. On the following day the Gamarala came to look. Having come before the Gamarala, also the Jackal Panditaya came near the trap. "Gamarala, to-day indeed he has been hanged," he said.
Etana metana to gasanne
Kambul baeta dipanne
Kanda sewanata aedapanne
"Strike thou there and here a blow;
Knocks upon the cheeks bestow;
Drag him to the hill's shadow,"
the Jackal Panditaya said.
Hampottayi to ganne
Malu tika mata denne.
Then he said--
"'Tis the skin will be for thee,
The little flesh thou'lt give to me."
Folktales, Fairytales, myths, legends, stories, fantasy