Buddha's Stories - 1
The
Golden Plate
[Greed and Honesty]
Once upon a time in a place called Seri, there were two salesmen
of pots and pans and hand-made trinkets. They agreed to divide the town between
them. They also said that after one had gone through his area, it was all right
for the other to try and sell where the first had already been.
One day, while one of them was coming down a street, a poor little
girl saw him and asked her grandmother to buy her a bracelet. The old
grandmother replied, "How can we poor people buy bracelets?" The
little girl said, "Since we don't have any money, we can give our black
sooty old plate." The old woman agreed to give it a try, so she invited
the dealer inside.
The salesman saw that these people were very poor and innocent, so
he didn't want to waste his time with them. Even though the old woman pleaded
with him, he said he had no bracelet that she could afford to buy. Then she
asked, "We have an old plate that is useless to us, can we trade it for a
bracelet?" The man took it and, while examining it, happened to scratch
the bottom of it. To his surprise, he saw that underneath the black soot, it
was a golden plate! But he didn't let on that he had noticed it. Instead he
decided to deceive these poor people so he could get the plate for next to
nothing. He said, "This is not worth even one bracelet. There's no value
in this. I don't want it!" He left, thinking he would return later when
they would accept even less for the plate.
Meanwhile the other salesman, after finishing in his part of town,
followed after the first as they had agreed. He ended up at the same house.
Again the poor little girl begged her grandmother to trade the old plate for a
bracelet. The woman saw that this was a nice tender looking merchant and
thought, "He's a good man, not like the rough-talking first
salesman." So she invited him in and offered to trade the same black sooty
old plate for one bracelet. When he examined it, he too saw that it was pure
gold under the grime. He said to the old woman, "All my goods and all my
money together are not worth as much as this rich golden plate!"
Of course the woman was shocked at this discovery, but now she
knew that he was indeed a good and honest fellow. So she said she would be glad
to accept whatever he could trade for it. The salesman said, "I'll give
you all my pots and pans and trinkets, plus all my money, if you will let me
keep just eight coins and my balancing scale, with its cover to put the golden
plate in." They made the trade. He went down to the river, where he paid
the eight coins to the ferry man to take him across.
By then the greedy salesman had returned, already adding up huge
imaginary profits in his head. When he met the little girl and her grandmother
again, he said he had changed his mind and was willing to offer a few cents,
but not one of his bracelets, for the useless black sooty old plate. The old
woman then calmly told him of the trade she had just made with the honest
salesman, and said, "Sir, you lied to us."
The greedy salesman was not ashamed of his lies, but he was
saddened as he thought, "I've lost the golden plate that must be worth a
hundred thousand." So he asked the woman, "Which way did he go?"
She told him the direction. He left all his things right there at her door and
ran down to the river, thinking, "He robbed me! He robbed me! He won't
make a fool out of me!"
From the riverside he saw the honest salesman still crossing over
on the ferry boat. He shouted to the ferry man, "Come back!" But the
good merchant told him to keep on going to the other side, and that's what he
did.
Seeing that he could do nothing, the greedy salesman exploded with
rage. He jumped up and down, beating his chest. He became so filled with hatred
towards the honest man, who had won the golden plate, that he made himself
cough up blood. He had a heart attack and died on the spot!
The moral
is: "Honesty is the best policy."
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