2
aefeonfia aa
ea Tat Te whe faearer eter? ehh ware fre afk ee re a, gaaTT
aitae fh, ofergcera OF oe A, aeaaTeeTae YmaT
oe ah, 3¢ Saferga fas, casi wile aPeaet aml 8 frecn Et aeaT 8, AR eT
arent ae att gat wt? yace arfpe en, Reo ate serahe
yal & fayfie, eaiare (are) gat Wear aa Fe vara Hor
ag, oa araci oe ater fasara ater? aera &faga & cifafamres
aaferga faara ah ance gu, via AR a Fe oTaT Bh? ATA Bala
A eB aaae, areage ara Peer oorwer Fm, ogfae Pro
at aar, We ge aaa Sl ale AGT? aareT aafergr fama ger at
weRe ced & Gar saat 2, Tari weet ze A A eA ATS, Re
war at ait ara ? aaferga ae are oraer aos at maT ahaz,
sara wet are gonfeatt (aragt) # eae at Rrerat 2, sake wa aat
araaea fara2, way eit carr Ht ae wear Tat 8, AR ge TT
at oy favara star? aafaga ad-ad sroat usfad ee, arr
aA, sat Ge Te, ft at ag aha peas, Lea areal az at
ovat wear?
| 2 householder, am still free of housshold. But shall one believe
me of such a bewildering claim ? have fathered sons and still | own
none. Whoshall rely on such @ paradox? Similarly 1 have friends. {
own riches. Iam acquisitive. 1am honoured and extolled but I have
disownedall. Shall one believe it 2 Whoshall accept my averment that
Pottifa, the goldsmith’s aristrocrati¢ daughter perjured 7 Who will accept
that Taitaliputra, the wise, was confounded ? Whowill agree with Taita-
fiputra that he entered the house and survived the severest of poisons ?
Thon the minister Taitatiputra attempted to hang himself from a tree. But
the rope brokeinto twain, to defeat the effort, Who shall accept it 7 Who
shail agree that hetied a heavy boulder roundhis neckand leapt inte water
tostill survive unscathed ? Then Taitaliputra prepared a pyra of logs and
set himself aflamo for immolation, but the fire also did not oblige him.
Who would accept such an improbability 7
aga ar gfar afrtarget daaafafaforand
sacar tiga eafaranfsao ca aor: ssa |
aafager { wfg ar ararenig : geal faftuodt fifefageaiae-
eqara, faget artaeq aefmaci, avaget aq qa’,
fersigant ey grata, asaantafa cq fafeed, cqsafae
lt"