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The Seven Jars
Long ago there lived in Northern India a merchant whose wife
had died and who went daily from his lonely house in the foothills
to the town below, for buying and selling. "I must have a
holiday," he said to himself one day, and he began to climb
up into the hills to enjoy the view and the sounds of the forest.
In the hot afternoon, feeling sleepy he looked for a quiet place
for a nap. Soon he discovered a kind of hole in a cliff, actually
a cave; so he lay down in the dark interior and slept. Waking
up, he felt there was something with him, in the cave.
Crawling back inside he found a large earthen jar. Then another,
and another and another -- there were seven jars there, altogether!
Now the merchant wondered if he dared to open them. There was
no sound of anyone about, still it seemed a bit risky. But curiosity,
as you know, is powerful indeed. He found he could lift the lid
of the first jar. What do you know! It seemed to be full of gold
coins. So were the second, third, fourth and fifth. Under the
lid of the sixth jar he found an aged piece of paper. On it was
written, "Finder, beware!! The seven jars of gold are yours,
but there is a curse. No one who takes them with him can leave
the curse behind." Now, next to curiosity, greed is the most
powerful urge. Our merchant overjoyed with his luck, wasted no
time in borrowing a two-wheeled cart to carry the jars of gold
to his house. It was exhausting and next to impossible. Bulky
and hard to lift, they had to be taken two by two; in the dark
of night he lugged them to his house. On the last trip, with the
seventh jar alone thankfully the load was lighter, and he noticed
nothing.
"Let me count the coins," he thought , "and
see how great my fortune is."
But -- when that seventh jar was opened he found it was only
half-full. "What!" he cried, "I was promised seven
jars!" He had thrown the note away and forgotten about the
curse. The merchant was overcome and obsessed by a spirit of grasping
and greed. Now, in the town, he went at his money-making hand
and fist; it was all he lived for. "I must fill
the seventh jar with gold,": this was his constant thought.
Yet the more he put into the jar, strangely the more it remained
half-full. He lived some years more, but never did he enjoy spending
the gold he had found, because it was never enough.
Arabian Nights, adapted.
Aum
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