English, asked by katkristian, 2 months ago

what is the advice given by the king of the barber about the seven jars?



Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

The offer of seven jars of gold, however, ... shall accept the seven jars. ... was made the king doubled his pay. ... barber was brought to his senses by this advice.

Answered by hadiqamalik3
0

Answer:

THE JAR OF DESIRE CAN NEVER BE FILLED UP

A BARBER who was passing under a haunted tree,

heard a voice say, “Will you accept seven jars full

of gold?” The barber looked around, but could see

no one. The offer of seven jars of gold, however,

roused his cupidity, and he cried aloud, “Yes, I

shall accept the seven jars.” At once came the

reply, “Go home, I have carried the jars to your

house.” The barber ran home in hot haste to verify

the truth of this strange announcement. And when

he entered the house, he saw the jars before him.

He opened them and found them all full of gold,

except the last one which was only half-full. A

strong desire now arose in the barber’s mind to fill

the seventh jar also for without it his happiness

was incomplete. He therefore converted all his

ornaments into gold coins and put them into the

jar; but the mysterious vessel was, as before,

unfilled. This exasperated the barber. Starving

himself and his family, he saved some amount

more and tried to fill the jar; but the jar remained

as before. So one day he humbly requested the

king to increase his pay, as his income was not

sufficient to maintain himself. Now the barber was

a favourite of the king, and as soon as the request

was made the king doubled his pay. All this pay he

saved and put into the jar, but the greedy jar

showed no signs of filling. At last he began to live

by begging from door to door, and his professional

income and the income from begging—all went

into the insatiable cavity of the mysterious jar.

Months passed, and the condition of the miserable

and miserly barber grew worse every day. Seeing

his sad plight the king asked him one day: “Hallo!

When your pay was half of what yon now get, you

were happy, cheerful and contented; but with

double that pay, I see you morose, care-worn and

dejected. What is the matter with you? Have you

got ‘the seven jars’?” The barber was taken aback

by this question and replied, “Your Majesty, who

has informed you of this?” The king said: “Don’t

you know that these are the signs of the person to

whom the Yaksha consigns the seven jars. He

offered me also the same jars, but I asked him

whether this money might be spent or was merely

to be hoarded. No sooner had T asked this

question than the Yaksha ran away without any

reply. Don’t you know that no one can spend that

money? It only brings with it the desire of

hoarding. Go at once and return the money.” The

barber was brought to his senses by this advice,

and he went to the haunted tree and said, “Take

back your gold, O Yaksha.” The Yaksha replied,

“All right.” When the barber returned home, he

found that the seven jars had vanished as

mysteriously as they were brought in, and with it

had vanished, his life-long savings too.

Those who do not understand the difference

between what is real expenditure and what is real

income, lose all they have.

THE JAR OF DESIRE CAN NEVER BE FILLED UP was posted on Tuesday, September 21st, 2010 at 4:10 am. This post is tagged and is filed under Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna. You can follow the replies through the comments feed.

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