Sunday, May 15, 2011

Khuddaka Nikaya - Jataka Preface

Khuddaka Nikaya - Jataka Preface

THE JĀTAKA
OR
STORIES OF THE BUDDHA'S FORMER BIRTHS.
TRANSLATED FROM THE PĀLI BY VARIOUS HANDS
UNDER THE EDITORSHIP OF
PROFESSOR E. B. COWELL.
VOL. I.
TRANSLATED BY
ROBERT CHALMERS, B.A.,
OF ORIEL COLLEGE, OXFORD.
[1895]
NOTICE OF ATTRIBUTION.
This text is in the public domain. These files may be used for any
non-commercial purpose, provided this notice of attribution is left intact in
all copies.
TO
PROFESSOR T. W. RHYS DAVIDS, LLḌ., PHḌ.,
THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED
BY
HIS FRIEND AND PUPIL
THE TRANSLATOR

p. vii
PREFACE.
IT was an almost isolated incident in Greek literary history 1, when Pythagoras
claimed to remember his previous lives. Heracleides Ponticus relates that he
professed to have been once born as Æthalides, the son of Hermes, and to have
then obtained as a boon from his father ζῶντα καὶ τελευτῶντα μνήμην ἔχειν τῶν
συμβαινόντων 2. Consequently he remembered the Trojan war, where, as Euphorbus,
he was wounded by Menelaus, and, as Pythagoras, he could still recognise the
shield which Menelaus had hung up in the temple of Apollo at Branchidæ; and
similarly he remembered his subsequent birth as Hermotimus, and then as Pyrrhus,
a fisherman of Delos. But in India this recollection of previous lives is a
common feature in the histories of the saints and heroes of sacred tradition;
and it is especially mentioned by Manu 3 as the effect of a self-denying and
pious life. The doctrine of Metempsychosis, since the later Vedic period, has
played such an important part in the history Of the national character and
religious ideas that we need not be surprised to find that Buddhist literature
from the earliest times (although giving a theory of its own to explain the
transmigration) has always included the ages of the past as an authentic
background to the founder's historical life as Gautama. Jātaka legends occur
even in the Canonical Piṭakas; thus the Sukha-vihāri Jātaka and the Tittira
Jātaka, which are respectively the 10th and the 37th in this volume, are found
in the Culla Vagga, vii. 1 and vi. 6, and similarly the Khandhavatta Jātaka,
which will be given in the next volume, is found in the Culla Vagga v. 6; and
there are several other examples. So too one of the minor books of the Sutta
Piṭaka (the Cariyā Piṭaka) consists of 35 Jātakas told in verse; and ten at
least
p. viii
of these can be identified in the volumes of our present collection already
published; and probably several of the others will be traced when it is all
printed. The Sutta and Vinaya Piṭakas are generally accepted as at least older
than the Council of Vesāli (380 B.C.?); and thus Jātaka legends must have been
always recognised in Buddhist literature.
This conclusion is confirmed by the fact that Jātaka scenes are found sculptured
in the carvings on the railings round the relic shrines of Sanchi and Amaravati
and especially those of Bharhut, where the titles of several Jātakas are clearly
inscribed over some of the carvings. These bas-reliefs prove that the
birth-legends were widely known in the third century B.C. and were then
considered as part of the sacred history of the religion. Fah-hian, when he
visited Ceylon, (400 AḌ.), saw at Abhayagiri "representations of the 500 bodily
forms which the Bodhisatta assumed during his successive births 1," and he
particularly mentions his births as Sou-to-nou, a bright flash of light, the
king of the elephants, and an antelope 2. These legends were also continually
introduced into the religious discourses 3 which were delivered by the various
teachers in the course of their wanderings, whether to magnify the glory of the
Buddha or to illustrate Buddhist doctrines and precepts by appropriate examples,
somewhat in the same way as mediæval preachers in Europe used to enliven their
sermons by introducing fables and popular tales to rouse the flagging attention
of their hearers 4.
It is quite uncertain when these various birth-stories were put together in a
systematic form such as we find in our present Jātaka collection. At first they
were probably handed down orally, but their growing popularity would ensure that
their kernel, at any rate, would ere long be committed to some more permanent
form. In fact there is a singular parallel to this in the 'Gesta Romanorum',
which was compiled by an uncertain author in the 14th century and contains
nearly 200 fables and stories told to illustrate various virtues and vices, many
of them winding up with a religious application.
p. ix
Some of the birth-stories are evidently Buddhistic and entirely depend for their
point on some custom or idea peculiar to Buddhism; but many are pieces of
folk-lore which have floated about the world for ages as the stray waifs of
literature and are liable everywhere to be appropriated by any casual claimant.
The same stories may thus, in the course of their long wanderings, come to be
recognised under widely different aspects, as when they are used by Boccaccio or
Poggio merely as merry tales, or by some Welsh bard to embellish king Arthur's
legendary glories, or by some Buddhist samaṇa or mediæval friar to add point to
his discourse. Chaucer unwittingly puts a Jātaka story into the mouth of his
Pardonere when he tells his tale of 'the ryotoures three'; and another appears
in Herodotus as the popular explanation of the sudden rise of the Alcmæonidæ
through Megacles' marriage with Cleisthenes' daughter and the rejection of his
rival Hippocleides.
The Pāli work, entitled 'the Jātaka', the first volume of which is now presented
to the reader in an English form, contains 550 Jātakas or Birth-stories, which
are arranged in 22 nipātas or books. This division is roughly founded on the
number of verses (gāthās) which are quoted in each story; thus the first book
contains 150 stories, each of which only quotes one verse, the second 100, each
of which quotes two, the third and fourth 50 each, which respectively quote 3
and 4, and so on to the twenty-first with 5 stories, each of which quotes 80
verses, and the twenty-second with 10 stories, each quoting a still larger
number. Each story opens with a preface called the paccuppannavatthu or 'story
of the present', which relates the particular circumstances in the Buddha's life
which led him to tell the birth-story and thus reveal some event in the long
series of his previous existences as a bodhisatta or a being destined to attain
Buddha-ship. At the end there is always given a short summary, where the Buddha
identifies the different actors in the story in their present births at the time
of his discourse,--it being an essential condition of the book that the Buddha
possesses the same power as that which Pythagoras claimed but with a far more
extensive range, since he could remember all the past events in every being's
previous existences as well as in his own. Every story is also illustrated by
one or more gāthās which are uttered by the Buddha while still a Bodhisatta and
so playing his part in the narrative; but sometimes the verses are put into his
mouth as the Buddha, when they are called abhisambuddha-gāthā.
p. x
Some of these stanzas are found in the canonical book called the Dhammapada; and
many of the Jātaka stories are given in the old Commentary on that book but with
varying details, and sometimes associated with verses which are not given in our
present Jātaka text. This might seem to imply that there is not necessarily a
strict connexion between any particular story and the verses which may be quoted
as its moral; but in most cases an apposite stanza would of course soon assert a
prescriptive right to any narrative which it seemed specially to illustrate. The
language of the gāthās is much more archaic than that of the stories; and it
certainly seems more probable to suppose that they are the older kernel of the
work, and that thus in its original form the Jātaka, like the Cariyā-piṭaka,
consisted only of these verses. It is quite true that they are generally
unintelligible without the story, but such is continually the case with
proverbial sayings; the traditional commentary passes by word of mouth in a
varying form along with the adage, as in the well-known οὐ φροντὶς Ἱπποκλείδῃ or
our own 'Hobson's choice', until some author writes it down in a crystallised
form 1. Occasionally the same birth-story is repeated elsewhere in a somewhat
varied form and with different verses attached to it; and we sometimes find the
phrase iti vitthāretabbam 2, which seems to imply that the narrator is to
amplify the details at his discretion.
The native tradition in Ceylon is that the original Jātaka Book consisted of the
gāthās alone, and that a commentary on these, containing the stories which they
were intended to illustrate, was written in very early times in Singhalese. This
was translated into Pāli about 430 AḌ. by Buddhaghosa, who translated so many of
the early Singhalese commentaries into Pāli; and after this the Singhalese
original was lost, The accuracy of this tradition has been discussed by
Professor Rhys Davids in the Introduction to the first volume of his 'Buddhist
Birth Stories' 3; and we may safely adopt his conclusion, that if the prose
commentary was not composed by Buddhaghosa, it was composed not long afterwards;
and as in any case it was merely a redaction of materials
p. xi
handed down from very early times in the Buddhist community, it is not a
question of much importance except for Pāli literary history. The gāthās are
undoubtedly old, and they necessarily imply the previous existence of the
stories, though not perhaps in the exact words in which we now possess them.
The Jātakas are preceded in the Pāli text by a long Introduction, the
Nidāna-kathā, which gives the Buddha's previous history both before his last
birth, and also during his last existence until he attained the state of a
Buddha 1. This has been translated by Professor Rhys Davids, but as it has no
direct connexion with the rest of the work, we have omitted it in our
translation, which commences with the first Birth-story.
We have translated the quasi historical introductions which always precede the
different birth-stories, as they are an essential part of the plan of the
original work,--since they link each tale with some special incident in the
Buddha's life, which tradition venerates as the occasion when he is supposed to
have recalled the forgotten scene of a long past existence to his
contemporaries. But it is an interesting question for future investigation how
far they contain any historical data. They appear at first sight to harmonise
with the framework of the Piṭakas; but I confess that I have no confidence in
their historical credibility,--they seem to me rather the laboured invention of
a later age, like the legendary history of the early centuries of ancient Rome.
But this question will be more easily settled, when we have made further
progress in the translation.
The Jātakas themselves are of course interesting as specimens of Buddhist
literature; but their foremost interest to us consists in their relation to
folk-lore and the light which they often throw on those popular stories which
illustrate so vividly the ideas and superstitions of the early times of
civilisation. In this respect they possess a special value, as, although much of
their matter is peculiar to Buddhism, they contain embedded with it an
unrivalled collection of Folk-lore. They are also full of interest as giving a
vivid picture of the social life and customs of ancient India. Such books as
Lieutenant-Colonel Sleeman's 'Rambles' or Mr Grierson's 'Bihār Peasant Life'
illustrate them at every turn. They form in fact an ever-shifting panorama of
the village life such as Fah-hian and Hiouen-thsang saw it in the old days
before the Muhammadan
p. xii
conquest, when Hindu institutions and native rule prevailed in every province
throughout the land. Like all collections of early popular tales they are full
of violence and craft, and betray a low opinion of woman; but outbursts of
nobler feeling are not wanting, to relieve the darker colours.
Professor Rhys Davids first commenced a translation of the Jātaka in 1880, but
other engagements obliged him to discontinue it after one volume had appeared,
containing the Nidānakathā and 40 stories. The present translation has been
undertaken by a band of friends who hope, by each being responsible for a
definite portion, to complete the whole within a reasonable time. We are in fact
a guild of Jātaka translators, çreshṭhi pūrvā vayaṃ çreṇiḥ; but, although we
have adopted some common principles of translation and aim at a certain general
uniformity in our technical terms and in transliteration, we have agreed to
leave each individual translator, within certain limits, a free hand in his own
work. The Editor only exercises a general superintendence, in consultation with
the two resident translators, Mr Francis and Mr Neil.
Mr R. Chalmers of Oriel College, Oxford, has translated in the present volume
the first volume of Prof. Fausböll's edition of the Pāli text (five volumes of
which have already appeared). The second volume will be translated by Mr W. H.
D. Rouse, late fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge, who will also be
responsible for the fourth; the third will be translated by Mr H. T. Francis,
Under-Librarian of the University Library at Cambridge, and late fellow of
Gonville and Caius College, and Mr R. A. Neil, fellow and assistant-tutor of
Pembroke College, who hope also to undertake the fifth 1.
E. B. COWELL.





Footnotes
vii:1 But compare the account of Aristeas of Proconnesus in Hdt. iv. 14, 15.
vii:2 Diogenes Laert. viii. 1.
vii:3 iv. 148.
viii:1 Beal's transl. p. 157.
viii:2 Hiouen-thsang twice refers to Jātakas, Julien, i. 137, 197.
viii:3 See Prof. M. M. Künté's paper, Journ. R. A. S. Ceylon, viii. 123.
viii:4 In the curious description of the Buddhist grove in the Harsha-carita,
viii., Bāṇa mentions owls "which repeated the Bodhisattva's Jātakas, having
gained illumination by continually hearing them recited."
x:1 We have an interesting illustration of the proverbial character of some of
the Jātaka stories in the Sāṇkhya Aphorisms, iv. 11, "he who is without hope is
happy like Piṅgalā," which finds its explanation in Jāt. 330. It is also
referred to in the Mahābh. xii. 6520.
x:2 As e.g. Fausböll, iii. p. 495. Cf. Divyāvad. p. 377, 1.
x:3 See also several papers in the eighth volume of the Journal of the Ceylon
Branch of the R. A. Society.
xi:1 This latter portion partly corresponds to the well-known Lalita-vistara of
the Northern Buddhists.
xii:1 A complete index will be given at the end of the last volume.

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