Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

The wonderful dream was fulfilled, and the mother and aunts called the boy Putraka.  Every morning they found the gold pieces under his pillow, and they took care of the money for him, so that when he grew up he was the very richest man in the whole country.  He had a happy childhood and boyhood, his only trouble being that he did not like having never seen his father.  His mother told him about the famine before he was born, and how his father and uncles had gone away and never come back.  He often said, “When I am a man I will find my father and bring him home again.”  He used his money to help others, and one of the best things he did was to irrigate the land; that is to say, he made canals into which water was made to flow in times when there was plenty of rain, so that there was no danger of there being another famine, such as that which had driven his father and uncles away.  The country in which he lived became very fruitful; everybody had enough to eat and drink; and Putraka was very much loved, especially by the poor and unhappy.  When the king who ruled over the land died, everybody wanted Putraka to take his place, and he was chosen at once.

5.  Will you describe the kind of man you think Putraka was?

6.  Do you know of any other country besides India in which everything depends on irrigation?

CHAPTER IV

One of the other wise things Putraka did, when he became king, was to make great friends with his Brahman subjects.  Brahmans are always very fond of travelling, and Putraka thought, if he were good and generous to them, they would talk about him wherever they went, and that perhaps through them his father and uncles would hear about him.  He felt sure that, if they knew he was now a king ruling over their native land, they would want to come back.  He gave the Brahmans plenty of money, and told them to try and find his father and uncles.  If they did, they were to say how anxious he was to see them, and promise them everything they wanted, if only they would return.

7.  Do you think it was wise of Putraka to be so anxious to get his father and uncles back, when he knew how selfish they had been in leaving his mother and aunts behind them?

8.  Can you suggest anything else Putraka might have done in the matter?

CHAPTER V

Just what the young king hoped came to pass.  Wherever the Brahmans went they talked about the country they came from and the wonderful young king who ruled over it.  Putraka’s father and uncles, who were after all not so very far off, heard the stories about him, and asked the Brahmans many questions.  The answers made them very eager to see Putraka, but they did not at first realize that he was closely related to them.  Only when they heard the name of his mother did they guess the truth.  Putraka’s father knew, when he deserted his wife, that God was

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Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.