Jataka Vol. I: Book I.--Ekanipāta: No. 28. Nandivisāla-Jātaka
p. 71
No. 28.
NANDIVISĀLA-JĀTAKA.
"Speak only words of kindness."--This story was told by the Master while at
Jetavana, about the bitter words spoken by the Six 1. For, in those days the
six, when they disagreed with respectable Brethren, used to taunt, revile and
jeer them, and load them with the ten kinds of abuse. This the Brethren reported
to the Blessed One, who sent for the Six and asked whether this charge was true.
On their admitting its truth, he rebuked them, saying, "Brethren, hard words
gall even animals: in bygone days an animal made a man who had used harsh
language to him lose a thousand pieces." And, so saying, he told this story of
the past.
_____________________________
Once on a time at Takkasilā in the land of Gandhāra 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 who came in--they being known to
give away presents of oxen to such-like holy men. The brahmin called it
Nandi-Visāla (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 thus to
himself, "I have been brought up by this brahmin with great pains, and all India
cannot show the bull which can draw what I can. How if I were to repay the
brahmin the cost of my nurture by making proof of my strength?" Accordingly, one
day he said to the brahmin, "Go, brahmin, to some merchant rich in herds, and
wager him a thousand pieces that your bull can draw a hundred loaded carts."
The brahmin went his way to a merchant and got into a discussion with him as to
whose oxen in. the town were the strong. "Oh, so-and-so's, or so-and-so's," said
the merchant. "But," added he, "there are no oxen in the town which can compare
with mine for real strength." Said the brahmin, "I have a bull who can pull a
hundred loaded carts." "Where's such a bull to be found?" laughed the merchant.
"I've got him at home," said the brahmin. "Make it a wager." "Certainly," said
the brahmin, and staked [192] a thousand pieces. Then he loaded a hundred carts
with sand, gravel, and stones, and leashed the lot together, one behind the
other, by cords from the axle-tree of the one in front to the trace-bar of its
successor. This done, he bathed Nandi-Visāla, gave him a measure of perfumed
rice to eat, hung a garland round his neck, and harnessed him all
p. 72
alone to the leading cart. The brahmin in person took his seat upon the pole,
and flourished his goad in the air, shouting, "Now then, you rascal! pull them
along, you rascal!"
"I'm not the rascal he calls me," thought the Bodhisatta to himself; and so he
planted his four feet like so many posts, and budged not an inch.
Straightway, the merchant made the brahmin pay over the thousand pieces. His
money gone, the brahmin took his bull out of the cart and went home, where he
lay down on his bed in an agony of grief. When Nandi-Visāla strolled in and
found the brahmin a prey to such grief, he went up to him and enquired if the
brahmin were taking a nap. "How should I be taking a nap, when I have had a
thousand pieces won of me?" "Brahmin, all the time I have lived in your house,
have I ever broken a pot, or squeezed up against anybody, or made messes about?"
"Never, my child." "Then, why did you call me a rascal? It's you who are to
blame, not I. Go and bet him two thousand this time. Only remember not to
miscall me rascal again." When he heard this, the brahmin went off to the
merchant, and laid a wager of two thousand. Just as before, he leashed the
hundred carts to one another and harnessed Nandi-Visāla, very spruce and fine,
to the leading cart. If you ask how he harnessed him, well, he did it in this
way:--first, he fastened the cross-yoke on to the pole; then he put the bull in
on one side, and made the other fast by fastening a smooth piece of wood from
the cross-yoke on to the axletree, so that the yoke was taut and could not skew
round either way. Thus a single bull could draw a cart made to be drawn by two.
So now seated on the pole, the brahmin stroked Nandi-Visāla on the back, and
called on him in this style, "Now then, my fine fellow! pull them along, my fine
fellow!" With a single pull the Bodhisatta tugged along the whole string of the
hundred carts [193] till the hindermost stood where the foremost had started.
The merchant, rich in herds, paid up the two thousand pieces he had lost to the
brahmin. Other folks, too, gave large sums to the Bodhisatta, and the whole
passed into the hands of the brahmin. Thus did he gain greatly by reason of the
Bodhisatta.
_____________________________
Thus laying down, by way of rebuke to the Six, the rule that hard words please
no one, the Master, as Buddha, uttered this stanza:--
Speak only words of kindness, never words
Unkind. For him who spoke him fair, he moved
A heavy load, and brought him wealth, for love.
When he had thus ended his lesson as to speaking only words of kindness, the
Master identified the Birth by saying, "Ānanda was the brahmin of those days,
and I myself Nandi-Visāla."
[Note. The substance of this story occurs in the Vinaya, Vol. IV. page 5.]
Footnotes
71:1 The 'Six' were notorious Brethren who are always mentioned as defying the
rules of the Order.
Next: No. 29. Kaṇha-Jātaka
0 comments:
Post a Comment