Category Archives: INDIA
17. Prince Brahmadatta And His Greed
Once upon a time, when Brahmadatta was king in Benares, the Bodhisatta was living as an ascetic, in the Himalayas; and he had cultivated the Faculties and the Attainments. Then the king of Benares, observing the activities of his son Prince Brahmadatta, was filled with suspicion, and banished him.
16. One Man’s Goodness
Once upon a time when Brahmadatta was reigning in Benares, the Bodhisatta was born a Brahmin. Growing up, he gave up the world and lived as the head of five hundred hermits at the foot of the mountains.
15. One Grey Hair
Once upon a time in Mithila in the realm of Videha there was a king named Makhadeva, who ruled righteously. For successive periods of eighty-four thousand years he had respectively amused himself as prince, ruled as viceroy, and ruled as king. All these long years had he lived, when one day he said to his barber, “Tell me; when you see any grey hairs in my head.” So one day, years and years after, the barber did find a single grey hair, and he told the king so. The king said,“Pull it out and lay it in my palm.” The barber accordingly plucked the hair out and laid it in the king’s hand. The king had at that time still eighty-four thousand years more to live; but nevertheless at the sight of that one grey hair he was filled with deep emotion. He seemed to see the King of Death standing over him, or to be cooped within a blazing hut of leaves. He cried: “Foolish Makhadeva! grey hairs have come upon you before you have been able to rid yourself of depravities.” And as he thought and thought about the appearance of his grey hair, he grew aflame within; the sweat rolled down from his body; whilst his raiment oppressed him and seemed intolerable. King Makhadeva thought,“This very day I will renounce the world for the Brother’s life.”
14. Nandhi – Visala
Once upon a time at Takkasila in the land of Gandhara, there was a king reigning there, and the Bodhisatta came to life as a bull. When he was quite a tiny calf, he was presented by his owners to a brahmin. The brahmin called it Nandi – Visala (Great Joy), and treated it like his own child, feeding the young creature on rice-gruel and rice. When the Bodhisatta grew up, he thought to himself, “I have been brought up by this brahmin with great pains. How can I repay the brahmin the cost of my nurture by making proof of my strength?” Accordingly, one day he said to the brahmin “Go brahmin! Go to some merchant and wager him a thousand pieces that your bull can draw a hundred loaded carts.” The brahmin went to a merchant and got into a discussion with him as to whose oxen in the town were the strong. The merchant said,“Oh, so-and-so’s oxen is strongest.” The brahmin said, “I have a bull who can pull a hundred loaded carts.”