A JACKAL was wandering in search of
food. He was extremely hungry, as he didn't get sufficient food for two days.
Suddenly an idea struck him.
A farmer named
Kelachar, had a large sugarcane field nearby. When the sugarcanes had grown to
full size, he had fenced the field safely, and he himself was staying there in
a raised hut to see that no one destroys or steals sugarcane from his field.
One day, he
was sitting in his Machan when the clever jackal approached him. The jackal
said, "Kelachar, something is going to happen this night. You know there
is a big elephant staying in the forest. That elephant has an eye on your
sugarcanes. So be alert with your bow and arrow." Kelachar was
very perturbed. Due to his hard toil and the rich manure he put, his sugarcanes
had grown up very well. If the elephant attacked it, all his efforts would go
waste. So he had to be on his guard. Kelachar took his bow and arrow and
cleaned them. He took his food early that night and lay in wait for the
elephant.
From
Kelachar's place, the jackal went straight to the hideout of the elephant. The
elephant was crouching on the ground near a pond. The jackal stood at a
respectable distance and spoke to the elephant; “You are my mighty uncle of the
forest. But I know that now a days you are not getting enough food to fill you
belly. The difficulty is because you are a vegetarian. And you eat only plants,
and that too a selected few.”
"You are
right, my friend," replied the elephant. "I can't eat all plants. And
actually I have to go from forest to forest to get my food. It is a difficult
task and on some days I have to go without food. Of course, this forest is
better, but still..." the elephant sighed. "Uncle,
I have come all the way to give a piece of good news to you. You will have
feast for one full week." "Interesting!
Tell me, tell me. What is it? Where is the feast?" asked the elephant.
"You know that Kelachar has a big sugarcane field. You
might have seen it. It is just at the foot of this hill. He is about to cut the
sugarcanes tomorrow. They have grown to full-size and this is the proper time to
eat them. No doubt he has fenced it, but that fence is nothing for you! So you
can easily go there this midnight when Kelacher will be sleeping, and eat to
your heart's content. Don't lose this opportunity."
"Thank
you very much for giving me this information. I shall attack the field at the
dead of night," said the elephant. "That will be ideal. When Kelachar
sleeps he sleeps like a pig and you don't worry about any danger." Saying
this, the jackal went down the hill.
He reached the boundary of the sugarcane field where there
was a lonely tree. Kelachar was there. He went near him. "What are you
doing here ?" the jackal enquired. "Nothing in particular. I was just
seeing from which place I can shoot my arrow at the elephant," replied Kelachar.
"I was about to tell you that," the jackal said. "Do you see a
lonely tree at the boundary of the sugarcane field ? That is the ideal place
for shooting your arrow. You can hide behind the tree. The elephant wouldn't
see you." "You are
right, my dear friend. That is the right place." Saying this, Kelachar
went to his hut.
The jackal went near the tree. In a hole near this tree a
snake was staying. The jackal went near that hole and called it. It came out.
"My dear brother," began the jackal, “You are facing a grave danger.
Have you ever seen Kelachar?” “Yes, Yes.
Isn't he the farmer who owns this sugarcane field?” "Well, he
is going to destroy you, wipe you and your family out of this world. He has
come to know that you are staying here, that you are very poisonous and in one
bite you can kill anyone.”
"Is that
so? Then what shall I do jackal brother? Please advise me. You are very
resourceful. If I die, my wife and little ones will be put to trouble. The
little ones are too young to look after themselves. And my wife will die if she
hears of my death. Please show me a way out," implored the snake.
“The best way
is to kill Kelachar before he kills you. So do one thing. At midnight he will
come this way. Sometimes he stands near this tree to see whether his sugarcanes
are safe on not. At that very moment, go and bite him ; not once, but four or
five times. You are so poisonous that he will die immediately.” Saying this,
the jackal bid him good-bye, wished him success and went home with great
satisfaction. He was very happy. He was confident that his plan would work
well. From the next day onwards he would have plenty to eat. The huge
elephant’s flesh would be enough for him for a month, and that of Kelachar's
for not less than a fortnight. At night the huge tusker entered the sugarcane
fields. The fence was no obstacle for aim. Kelachar saw it from his observation
point. He took his bow and arrow and aimed at the elephant.
He sent three arrows. He was an expert archer. All the three
arrows struck the elephant at vulnerable points. Suddenly he felt an
inscrutable pain on his ankle as if some insect had bitten him—not once but
three or four times. He looked down and saw a snake gliding at fast speed on me
ground. Immediately he trampled on it with all his might. The snake died at
once. But suddenly Kelachar's bow and arrow fell down from his hands and he too
fell dead.
The jackal, seeing all this from a distance ventured to come near
the dead body of Kelachar. Even though it was dark, he could see the bow lying
by his side. On the bow, were some blood spots and so he decided to lick it
first, before he started the grand feast. But while licking, his teeth touched
the string of the bow and it broke. The string was so tightly tied to both ends
of the bow that due to its impact there was sudden jerk and one end of the bow
went deep inside the jackal's mouth cutting it into two. And that was the end
of the cunning jackal too.
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