[235] Mahādhammapāla Jātaka. See above, p. 126.

[236] This formula has been constantly found in rock inscriptions in India and Ceylon over the ancient cave-dwellings of Buddhist hermits.

[237] Apaṇṇaka Jātaka.

[238] Literally, sat down on one side, avoiding the six improper ways of doing so.

[239] A famous haunt of lions in the Himālaya Mountains.

[240] Trust in the Buddha, in the Order, and in the Truth, which are the ’Three Gems.’

[241] This last quotation is from Dhammapada, verses 188-192.

[242] See above, pp. 54-58, for an explanation of this.

[243] A gloss repeats these descriptions at somewhat greater length.

[244] That is, I think, between the persons in the story on the one hand, and the Buddha and his contemporaries on the other: not, as Childers says (under anusandhi), between the story and the maxim.