Страница - 15Страница - 17- Continuation of the story of Udayana and his son
27–43
- Story of Śúravarman who spared his guilty wife
27
- Story of the ox abandoned in the forest, and the lion, and the two
jackals 27–43
- Story of the monkey that pulled out the wedge
28
- Story of the jackal and the drum
30
- Story of the crane and the Makara
31–32
- Story of the lion and the hare
32–33
- Story of the louse and the flea
34
- Story of the lion, the panther, the crow and the jackal
35–36
- Story of the pair of ṭiṭṭhibhas
36–38
- Story of the tortoise and the two swans
37
- Story of the three fish 37–38
- Story of the monkeys, the firefly and the bird
39
- Story of Dharmabuddhi and Dushṭabuddhi
40–41
- Story of the crane, the snake, and the mungoose
41
- Story of the mice that ate an iron balance
41–42
[Chapter LXI.]
- Continuation of the story of Udayana and his son
41–63
- Story of the foolish merchant who made aloes-wood into charcoal
44
- Story of the man who sowed roasted seed
44
- Story of the man who mixed fire and water
44
- Story of the man who tried to improve his wife’s nose
45
- Story of the foolish herdsman 45
- Story of the fool and the ornaments
45
- Story of the fool and the cotton
45
- Story of the foolish villagers who cut down the palm-trees
46
- Story of the treasure-finder who was blinded
46
- Story of the fool and the salt
46–47
- Story of the fool and his milch-cow
47
- Story of the foolish bald man and the fool who pelted him
47
- Story of the crow, and the king of the pigeons, the tortoise and
the deer 48–52
- Story of the mouse and the hermit
49–51
- Story of the Bráhman’s wife and the
sesame-seeds 50–51
- Story of the greedy jackal 50
- Story of the wife who falsely accused her husband of murdering a
Bhilla 53–54
- Story of the snake who told his secret to a woman
54–55
- Story of the bald man and the hair-restorer
55
- Story of a foolish servant 55
- Story of the faithless wife who was present at her own
Śráddha 55–56
- Story of the ambitious Chaṇḍála maiden
56
- Story of the miserly king 57
- Story of Dhavalamukha, his trading friend, and his fighting friend
57–58
- Story of the thirsty fool that did not drink
58
- Story of the fool who killed his son
58
- Story of the fool and his brother
58
- Story of the Brahmachárin’s son
59
- Story of the astrologer who killed his son
59
- Story of the violent man who justified his character
59–60
- Story of the foolish king who made his daughter grow
60
- Story of the man who recovered half a paṇa from his servant
60
- Story of the fool who took notes of a certain spot in the sea
60–61
- Story of the king who replaced the flesh
61
- Story of the woman who wanted another son
61
- Story of the servant who tasted the fruit
62
- Story of the two brothers Yajnasoma and Kírtisoma
62–63
- Story of the fool who wanted a barber
63
- Story of the man who asked for nothing at all
63
[Chapter LXII.]
- Continuation of the story of Udayana and his son
64–79
- Story of the war between the crows and the owls
64–75
- Story of the ass in the panther’s skin
65
- How the crow dissuaded the birds from choosing the owl king
65–68
- Story of the elephant and the hares
66–67
- Story of the bird, the hare, and the cat
67–68
- Story of the Bráhman, the goat, and the rogues
68–69
- Story of the old merchant and his young wife
69–70
- Story of the Bráhman, the thief, and the Rákshasa
70
- Story of the carpenter and his wife
71–72
- Story of the mouse that was turned into a maiden
72–73
- Story of the snake and the frogs
74
- Story of the foolish servant 75
- Story of the two brothers who divided all that they had
75
- Story of the mendicant who became emaciated from discontent
75–76
- Story of the fool who saw gold in the water
76
- Story of the servants who kept rain off the trunks
76–77
- Story of the fool and the cakes
77
- Story of the servant who looked after the door
77
- Story of the simpletons who ate the buffalo
77–78
- Story of the fool who behaved like a Brahmany drake
78
- Story of the physician who tried to cure a hunchback
78–79
[Chapter LXIII.]
- Continuation of the story of Udayana and his son
79–90
- Story of Yaśodhara and Lakshmídhara and the two wives
of the water-genius 79–83
- Story of the water-genius in his previous birth
82
- Story of the Bráhman who became a Yaksha
83
- Story of the monkey and the porpoise
84–87
- Story of the sick lion, the jackal, and the ass
85–87
- Story of the fool who gave a verbal reward to the musician
87
- Story of the teacher and his two jealous pupils
88
- Story of the snake with two heads
88–89
- Story of the fool who was nearly choked with rice
89
- Story of the boys that milked the donkey
89–90
- Story of the foolish boy that went to the village for nothing
90
[Chapter LXIV.]
- Continuation of the story of Udayana and his son
90–100
- Story of the Bráhman and the mungoose
90–91
- Story of the fool that was his own doctor
91
- Story of the fool who mistook hermits for monkeys
91–92
- Story of the fool who found a purse
92
- Story of the fool who looked for the moon
92
- Story of the woman who escaped from the monkey and the cowherd
92–93
- Story of the two thieves Ghaṭa and Karpara
93–96
- Story of Devadatta’s wife
96
- Story of the wife of the Bráhman Rudrasoma
96–97
- Story of the wife of Śuśin
97–98
- Story of the snake-god and his wife
98–99