59. The Bodhisatta – As A Pig
Once upon a time when Brahmadatta was king in Benares, the Bodhisatta was conceived by a wild sow; in due time she delivered two male young pigs. One day she took them and lay down in a pit. And old woman was coming home with a basket-full of cotton from field and tapping the ground with her stick. The sow heard the sound, and in fear of death left her young and ran away. The old woman saw the young pigs, and took them home.
Then she called the elder Mahatundila(Big-snout), the younger Cullatundila (little-snout), and reared them like children. In time they grew up and become fat. When the old woman was asked to sell them for money, she answered, “They are my children,” and would not sell them.
On certain feast–day some lewd fellows were drinking strong drink, and when their meat was done they considered where they could get meat; finding out that there were pigs in the old woman’s house, they asked her to sell the pigs but she refused them. Then they made the old woman drink strong drink, and when she was drunk, saying, “Mother, what will you do with the pigs? Take the money and spend it,” they put pieces of money in her hand. She took the pieces saying,” I cannot give you Mahatundila, take Cullatundila.” “Where is he?” “There he is in that bush.” “Call him.” The old woman called him, “Come, little Cullatundila, come.” Mahatundila, hearing this, thought, “All this time mother has never given the call to Cullatundila, she always calls me first; certainly some danger must have arisen for us to-day.” He told his younger brother, “Brother, mother is calling you; go and find out.” He went out, and seeing them standing by food-trough he thought, “Death is come upon me to-day,” and so in fear of death he turned back shaking to his brother; and when he came back he could not contain himself but reeled about shaking. Mahatundila seeing him said, “Brother, you are shaking to-day and reeling and watching the entrance; why are you doing so?” he, explained:–
Something strange to-day I fear:
The trough is full, and mistress by;
Men, noose in hand, are standing near:
To eat appears jeopardy.
Then the Bodhisatta hearing him said, “Brother Cullatundila, the purpose for which my mother rears pigs all this time has to-day come to its fulfillment; do not grieve,” and so with sweet voice and the ease of a Buddha he said:–
You fear, and look for aid, and quake,
But, helpless, whither can you flee?
We’re fattened for our flesh’s sake:
Eat, Cullatundila, and cheerfully.
Plunge bold into the crystal pool,
Wash all the stains of sweat away:
You’ll find our ointment wonderful,
Whose fragrance never can decay?
As he taught the Ten Perfections, his voice reached and extended to Benares over the whole twelve leagues. At the instant of hearing it, the people of Benares from kings and viceroys downwards came, and those who did not come stood listening in their houses. The king’s men breaking down the bush leveled the ground and scattered sand. The drunkenness left the lewd fellows, and throwing away the nooses they stood listening to the law: and the old woman’s drunkenness left her also. The Bodhisatta began to preach the law to Cullatundila among the multitude.
Cullatundila hearing him, thought, “My brother says so to me; but it is never our custom to plunge into the pool, and by bathing to wash away sweat from our bodies and after taking away old stain to get new ointment; why does my brother say so to me?” so he spoke:–
But what is that fair crystal pool
And what the stains of sweat, I pray?
And what the ointment wonderful,
Whose fragrance never can decay?
The Bodhisatta hearing this said, “Then listen with attentive ear,” and so he spoke:–
The law is the fair crystal pool,
Sin is the stain of sweat, they say:
Virtue’s the ointment wonderful,
Whose fragrance never will decay?
Men that lose their life are glad,
Men that keep it feel annoy:
Men should die and not be sad,
As at mid-month’s festal joy.
So the Great Being expounded the law in a sweet voice with a Buddha’s charm. The multitude by thousands applauded. The king of Benares hounured the Bodhisatta with royal place, and giving glory to the old woman he caused both pigs to be bathed in perfumed water, and clothed with robes, and ornamented with jewels on the neck, and put them in the position of his sons in the city; so he guarded them with a great retinue.
The Bodhisatta gave the five commands to the king, and all the inhabitants of Benares and Kasi kept the commands. The Bodhisatta preached the law to them on the holy days (new and full moon), and sitting in judgment decided cases; while he lived there were no bringers of unjust suits. Afterwards the king died. The Bodhisatta did the last honours to his body; then he caused a book of judgments to be written and said, “By observing this book you should settle suits;” so having expounded the Law to the people and preached to them with zeal, he went to the forest with Cullatundila while they all wept and lamented. Then the Bodhisatta’s preaching went on for sixty thousand years.
After the lesson, the Master declared the Truths and identified the Birth: – at the end of the Truths the Brother who feared death was established in the fruition of the first Path: – “In those days the king was Ananda, Cullatundila was the Brother who fears death, the multitude was the Congregation, Mahatundila myself.”
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