Eating and drinking takes up a very small place, less perhaps than we might expect though it is hardly a subject for edifying tales. A few times we see food being prepared. First on O 2

####No Reference found O, 2

where a cauldron is fixed on to a trivet over a wood fire, which a man is blowing up with a blowpipe; another sits next to him cleaning fish to be cooked in the pot. The knife he is using is just the shape of the present day wedung. On O 15
Series O
Plate II 15
636b.JPG
we see a wide flat pan also on a trivet and some-one blowing up the fire; another man stands by, stirring with a spoon and holding a smaller dish in his hand. A third time we find something similar on Ia 84
Life of Buddha
Series Ia
Plate XLII 84
2597b.JPG
Life of Buddha
where the rice is being cooked for the future Buddha; here too a large cauldron on a trivet over a woodfire and two women, one with a spoon, the other with a blowpipe. In conclusion may be mentioned O 89
Series O
Plate XII 89
835a.JPG
where fishes and tortoises are being boiled by two evildoers, who will soon receive the same treatment themselves in the infernal regions.

The meal itself we find ten times O 12, 14, 20, 97, 122, 144
Series O
Plate II 12
633b.JPG
Series O
Plate II 14
635a.JPG
Series O
Plate III 20
653b.JPG
Series O
Plate XIII 97
857a.JPG
Series O
Plate XVI 122
918a.JPG

####No Reference found O, 144

Ia 29, 112
Life of Buddha
Series Ia
Plate XV 29
2570a.JPG
Life of Buddha
Life of Buddha
Series Ia
Plate LVI 112
2611b.JPG
Life of Buddha
Ib 66
main wall
Series Ib
Plate XXXIII 66
1190a.JPG
main wall
IBb 15

####No Reference found IBb, 15

the bill of fare appears to be always the same, the wellknown "rijsttafel". There is always a large ball of rice in the middle with small dishes of various viands all round it, more or less in number and distinctness. Unusually elaborate and by good luck unusually well-preserved are the "rijsttafels" on Ia 112
Life of Buddha
Series Ia
Plate LVI 112
2611b.JPG
Life of Buddha
and Ib 66
main wall
Series Ib
Plate XXXIII 66
1190a.JPG
main wall
; on the latter we can plainly see the fishes and the
sate j ust as on the famous Prambanan relief. Sometimes the fish are served on top of the ball of rice. Drink is not always given, but we see drinking cups of rather wide or bowlshape being filled from a jug with a spout, while relays of food are being brought to the table; the large bowl that is being served on Ib 66
main wall
Series Ib
Plate XXXIII 66
1190a.JPG
main wall
might perhaps be intended for a sayuran. On very rare occasions we are strewn a drinking-party with its attendant dissoluteness: they drink out of wide bowls and the spirituous liquor is poured out of a jug with spout so as just-mentioned, or a smalI-sized martevan such as we see being brought to the table O 97
Series O
Plate XIII 97
857a.JPG
or a jug narrow in shape with along neck, pointed spout and large handle, the same as used for water-carrying at the well on Ib 16
main wall
Series Ib
Plate VIII 16
1164b.JPG
main wall
A smaller scene of this kind we find on O 90
Series O
Plate XII 90
834a.JPG
as a prelude to hell-punishment; again more circumstantial, on 0 20 andIBa 59; what makes this affair still more disgraceful according to the Buddhist sculptors, perhaps intentionally, these offenders are brahmans.

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