TEACHING IN ANCIENT FABLES
Fable 7
Once there was a wealthy but foolish man. When he saw the
beautiful three-storied house of another man, he envied it and
made up his mind to have on e built just like it, thinking he
was himself just as wealthy. He called a carpenter and ordered
him to build it. The carpenter consented and immediately began
to construct the foundation, the first story, the second story,
and then the third story. The wealthy man noticed this with
irritation and said: -- “I don’t want a foundation or a first
story or a second story; I just want the beautiful third story.
Build it quickly.”
A
foolish man always thinks only of the results, and is impatient
without the effort that is necessary to get good results. No
good can be attained without proper effort, just as there can be
no third story without the foundation and the first and the
second stories.
The above TEACHING IN ANCIENT FABLES is taken from THE
TEACHING OF BUDDHA. May all who reads this article gain in
wisdom and be well and happy. Sadhu! Sadhu! Sadhu!
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