Sunday, May 15, 2011

Khuddaka Nikaya - Psalms of the Sisters - Psalms of About Twenty Verses

Khuddaka Nikaya - Psalms of the Sisters ( Therigatha ) - Psalms of About Twenty Verses



CANTO XIII
PSALMS OF ABOUT TWENTY VERSES
LXVI
Ambapālī.
SHE, too, having made her resolve under former Buddhas, and heaping up good of
age-enduring efficacy in this or that rebirth, entered the Order when Sikhi was
Buddha. And one day, while yet a novice, she was walking in procession with
Bhikkhunīs, doing homage at a shrine, when an Arahant Therī in front of her
hastily spat in the court of the shrine. Coming after her, but not having
noticed the Therī's action, she said in reproof: 'What prostitute has been
spitting in this place?'
As a Bhikkhunī, observing the Precepts, she felt repugnance for rebirth by
parentage, and set her mind intently on spontaneous re-generation. So in her
last birth she came into being spontaneously at Vesālī, in the King's gardens,
at the foot of a mango-tree. The gardener found her, and brought her to the
city. She was known as the Mango-guardian's girl. And such was her beauty,
grace, and charm that many young Princes strove with each other to possess her,
till, in order to end their strife, and because the power of karma impelled
them, they agreed to appoint her courtezan. Later on, out of faith in the
Master, she built a Vihāra 337 in her own gardens, and handed it over to him and
the Order. And when she had heard her own son, the Elder Vimala-Kondañña, preach
the Norm, she worked for insight, and studying the law of impermanence as
illustrated in her own ageing body, she uttered the following verses:
Glossy and black as the down of the bee my curls once clustered.
They with the waste of the years are liker to hempen or bark cloth.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. 338
(252)

Fragrant as casket of perfumes, as full of sweet blossoms the hair of me.
All with the waste of the years now rank as the odour of hare's fur.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (253)

Dense as a grove well planted, and comely with comb, pin, and parting.
All with the waste of the years dishevelled the fair plaits and fallen.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (254)

Glittered the swarthy plaits in head-dresses jewelled and golden.
All with the waste of the years broken, and shorn are the tresses.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (255)

Wrought as by sculptor's craft the brows of me shone, finely pencilled.
They with the waste of the years are seamèd with wrinkles, o'erhanging.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (256)

Flashing and brilliant as jewels, dark-blue and long-lidded the eyes of
me.
They with the waste of the years spoilt utterly, radiant no longer.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (257)

Dainty and smooth the curve of the nostrils e'en as in children.
Now with the waste of the years searèd 339 the nose is and shrivelled.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (258)

Lovely the lines of my ears as the delicate work of the goldsmith. 340
They with the waste of the years are seamèd with wrinkles and pendent.
Such and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (259)

Gleamed as I smiled my teeth like the opening buds of the plantain.
They with the waste of the years are broken and yellow as barley.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (260)

Sweet was my voice as the bell of the cuckoo 341 through woodlands
flitting.
Now with the waste of the years broken the music and halting.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (261)

Softly glistened of yore as mother-of-pearl the throat of me.
Now with the waste of the years all wilted its beauty and twisted.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (262)

Beauteous the arms of me once shone like twin pillars cylindrical.
They with the waste of the years hang feeble as withering branches. 342
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (263)

Beauteous of yore were my soft hands with rings and gewgaws resplendent.
They with the waste of the years like roots are knotted and scabrous. 343
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (264)

Full and lovely in contour rose of yore the small breasts of me.
They with the waste of the years droop shrunken as skins without water.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (265)

Shone of yore this body as shield of gold well-polishèd.
Now with the waste of the years all covered with network of wrinkles.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (266)

Like to the coils of a snake 344 the full beauty of yore of the thighs of
me.
They with the waste of the years are even as stems of the bamboo.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (267)

Beauteous to see were my ankles of yore, bedecked with gold bangles.
They with the waste of the years are shrunken as faggots of sesamum.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (268)

Soft and lovely of yore as though filled out with down were the feet of
me.
They with the waste of the years are cracked open and wizened with
wrinkles.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (269)

Such hath this body been. Now age-weary and weak and unsightly,
Home of manifold ills; old house whence the mortar is dropping.
So and not otherwise runneth the rune, the word of the Soothsayer. (270)

And inasmuch as the Therī, by the visible signs of impermanence in her own
person, discerned impermanence in all phenomena of the three planes, and bearing
that in mind, brought into relief the signs of Ill and of No-soul, she, making
clear her insight in her Path-progress, attained Arahantship.



337 See Rhys Davids, Buddhist Suttas (S.B.E., xi.), pp. 30-33.
338 Used in its first intention, Truth-speaker. On this, and on the metre, see
Introduction. The 'rune' is the Impermanence of everything. Cf. Ps lxiii.
339 Upakūlitā, not yet found elsewhere, may be from the root kūl, to burn.
340 It is interesting that the Commentary speaks of the goldsmith's work of
past ages, as if conscious of living (himself) in a decadent period of such
arts.
341 Kokilā, rendered by lexicons 'Indian cuckoo.' The name seems to point to
somewhat similar bird-notes.
342 Lit., as the weak trumpet-flower (plant), the Commentary adding phalita,
broken, or fruit-laden, and so heavily drooping.
343 Lit., more simply, 'like one little root after another.'
344 I here follow Dr. Neumann, and not the Commentator. The latter calls
nāgabhoga an elephant's trunk; the Pitakas apply the term, it would seem, only
as in the text. Cf. Majjhima Nikāya, i. 134.



LXVII
Rohiṇī.
She, too, having made her resolve under former Buddhas, and heaping up good of
age-enduring efficacy in this and that rebirth, was born, ninety-one æons ago,
in the time of Vipassi Buddha, in a clansman's family. One day she saw the
Exalted One seeking alms in the city of Bandhumatī, and filling his bowl with
sweet cakes, she worshipped low at his feet in joy and gladness. And when, after
many rebirths in heaven and on earth in consequence thereof, she had accumulated
the conditions requisite for emancipation, she was, in this Buddha-era, reborn
at Vesālī, in the house of a very prosperous brahmin, and named Rohiṇī. 345 Come
to years of discretion, she went, while the Master was staying at Vesālī, to the
Vihāra, and heard the doctrine. She became a 'Stream-entrant,' and teaching her
parents the doctrine, and they accepting it, she gained their leave to enter the
Order. Studying for insight, she not long after attained Arahantship, together
with thorough grasp of the Norm in form and meaning.
And reflecting on a discussion she had had with her father while she had yet
only entered the Stream, she uttered the substance of it as verses of
exultation:
'"See the recluses!" dost thou ever say.
"See the recluses!" waking me from sleep.
Praise of recluses ever on thy tongue.
Say, damsel, hast a mind recluse to be? (271)
Thou givest these recluses as they come,
Abundant food and drink. Come, Rohiṇī. 346
I ask, why are recluses dear to thee? (272)
Not fain to work are they, the lazy crew.
They make their living off what others give.
Cadging are they, and greedy of tit-bits–
I ask, why are recluses dear to thee?' (273)

Full many a day, dear father, hast thou asked
Touching recluses. Now will I proclaim
Their virtues and their wisdom and their work. (274)

Full fain of work are they, no sluggard crew.
The noblest work they do, they drive out lust
And hate. Hence are recluses dear to me. (275)

The three fell roots of evil they eject,
Making all pure within, leaving no smirch,
No stain. Hence are recluses dear to me. (276)

Their work 346 in action's pure, pure is their work
In speech, and pure no less than these their work
In thought. Hence are recluses dear to me. (277)

Immaculate as seashell or as pearl,
Of lustrous characters compact, without,
Within. 347 Hence are recluses dear to me. (278)

Learn'd and proficient in the Norm; elect,
And living by the Norm that they expound
And teach. Hence are recluses dear to me. (279)

Learn'd and proficient in the Norm; elect,
And living by the Doctrine; self-possessed,
Intent. Hence are recluses dear to me. (280)

Far and remote they wander, self-possessed;
Wise in their words and meek, they know the end
Of Ill. Hence are recluses dear to me. (281)

And when along the village street they go,
At naught they turn to look; incurious
They walk. Hence are recluses dear to me. (282)

They lay not up a treasure for the flesh,
Nor storehouse-jar nor crate. The Perfected
Their Quest. Hence are recluses dear to me. (283)

They clutch no coin; no gold their hand doth take,
Nor silver. For their needs sufficient yields
The day. 348 Hence are recluses dear to me. (284)

From many a clan and many a countryside
They join the Order, mutually bound
In love. Hence are recluses dear to me.' (285)

'Now truly for our weal, O Rohiṇī,
Wert thou a daughter born into this house!
Thy trust is in the Buddha and the Norm
And in the Order; keen thy piety. (286)
For well thou know'st this is the Field supreme
Where merit may be wrought. We too henceforth
Will minister ourselves to holy men.
For thereby shall accrue to our account
A record of oblations bounteous.' (287)

'If Ill thou fearest, if thou like it not,
Go thou and seek the Buddha and the Norm,
And Order for thy refuge; learn of them
And keep the Precepts. So shalt thou find weal.' 349 (288)

'Lo! to the Buddha, I for refuge go
And to the Norm and Order. I will learn
Of them to take upon myself and keep
The Precepts. So shall I indeed find weal. (289)




Once but a son of brahmins born was I.
To-day I stand brahmin in very deed.
The nobler Threefold Wisdom have I won,
Won the true Veda-lore, and graduate
Am I from better Sacrament returned,
Cleansed by the inward spiritual bath.' 350 (290)

For the brahmin, established in the Refuges and the Precepts, when later on he
became alarmed, renounced the world, and, developing insight, was established in
Arahantship. Reflecting on his attainment, he exulted in that last verse.



345 I.e., Latinized, Flavia. Childers instances a red cow so called, and a
constellation.
346 Note her emphasis on work or action (kamma or karma) to meet her
father's–the typically worldly man's–failure to discern the fact and value of
any 'work' that had no worldly object.
347 Unspotted by greed, hate, or dulness; full of the A-sekha's
qualities–virtue; contemplation, concentration, insight (Commentary).
348 This phrase is amplified in Sanyutta Nikāya, i. 5: 'They mourn not over
the past, nor hanker after the future. They maintain themselves by the
present.' Cf. the same attitude prescribed in the Sermon on the Mount (Matt.
vi. 25-34).
349 I.e., she referred him to the true source of the 'weal' he imputed to her.
The rest is borrowed from Ps. lxv.
350 Cf. Psalm lxv.



LXVIII
Cāpā.
She, too, having made her resolve under former Buddhas, and heaping up good of
age-enduring efficacy in this and that rebirth, till she had accumulated the
sources of good, and matured the conditions for emancipation, was, in this
Buddha-age, reborn in the Vankahāra country, at a certain village of trappers,
as the daughter of the chief trapper, and named Cāpā. 351 And at that time
Upaka, an ascetic, 352 met the Master as he was going to Benares, there to set
rolling from his Bo-tree throne 353 the Wheel of the Norm, and asked him: 'You
seem, my friend, in perfect health! Clear and pure is your complexion. Wherefore
have you, friend, left the world? or who may your teacher be? or whose doctrine
do you believe in?' And he was thus answered:
'All have I overcome. All things I know,
'Mid all things undefiled. Renouncing all,
In death of Craving wholly free. My own
The Deeper View. Whom should I name to thee?
For me no teacher lives. I stand alone
On earth, in heav'n rival to me there's none.

Now go I on seeking Benares town,
To start the Wheel, the gospel of the Norm,
To rouse and guide the nations blind and lost,
Striking Salvation's drum, Ambrosia's alarm.'
The ascetic, discerning the omniscience and great mission of the Master, was
comforted in mind, and replied: 'Friend, may these things be! Thou art worthy
354 to be a conqueror, world without end!' Then, taking a by-road, he came to
the Vankahāra country, and abode near the hamlet of the trappers, where the head
trapper supplied his wants. One day the latter, setting off on a long hunt with
sons and brothers, bade his daughter not neglect 'the Arahant' 355 in his
absence. Now, she was of great beauty; and Upaka, seeking alms at her home, and
captivated by her beauty, could not eat, but took his food home, and laid down
fasting, vowing he would die should he not win Cāpā. After seven days the father
returned, and, on inquiring for his 'Arahant,' heard he had not come again after
the first day. The trapper sought him, and Upaka, moaning, and rolling over,
confessed his plight. The trapper asked if he knew any craft, and he answered,
'No;' but offered to fetch their game and sell it. The trapper consented, and,
giving him a coat, brought him to his own home, and gave him his daughter. In
due time she had a son, whom they called Subhadda. 356 Cāpā, when the baby
cried, sang to him: 'Upaka's boy, ascetic's boy, game-dealer's boy, don't cry,
don't cry!' mocking her husband. And he said at length: 'Do not thou, Cāpā,
fancy I have none to protect me. 357 I have a friend, even a conqueror eternal,
and to him I will go.' She saw that he was vexed, and teased him again and again
in the same way, till one day, in anger, he got ready to go. She said much, but
vainly, to prevent him, and he set out westward. And the Exalted One was then at
Sāvatthī in the Jeta Grove, and announced this to the brethren: 'He who to-day
shall come asking, "Where is the Conqueror eternal?" send him to me.' And Upaka
arrived, and, standing in the midst of the Vihāra, asked: 'Where is the
Conqueror eternal?' So they brought him, and when he saw the Exalted One, he
said: 'Dost know me, Exalted One?' 'Yea, I know. But thou, where hast thou spent
the time?' 'In the Vankahāra country, lord.' 'Upaka, thou art now an old man;
canst thou bear the religious life?' 'I will enter thereon, lord.' The Master
bade a certain Bhikkhu, 'Come, do thou, Bhikkhu, ordain him.' And he thereafter
exercising and training himself, was soon established in the Fruition of the
Path-of-No-Return, and thereupon died, being reborn in the Aviha heavens. 358 At
the moment of that rebirth he attained Arahantship.
Seven have thus attained it, as it has been said.
But Cāpā, sick at heart over his departure, delivered her boy to his
grandfather, and, following in the way Upaka had gone, renounced the world at
Sāvatthī, and attained Arahantship. And uniting Upaka's verses with her own, she
thus exulted:
(Her husband speaks.)
'Once staff in hand homeless I fared and free.
Now but a trapper am I, sunken fast
In baneful bog of earthly lusts, yet fain
To come out on the yonder side. My wife (291)
Plays with her child and mocks my former state,
Deeming her charm yet holdeth me in thrall.
But I will cut the knot and roam again.' (292)

Cāpā.
'O be not angry with me, hero mine!
O thou great prophet, be not wroth with me!
For how may he who giveth place to wrath
Attain to holy life and purity?' (293)

'Nay, I'll go forth from Nāla. 359 Who would live
At Nāla now, where he who fain to lead
A life of righteousness sees holy men
Beguilèd by the beauty of a girl!' (294)

'O turn again, my dark-eyed lover, come
And take thy fill of Cāpā's love for thee,
And I, thy slave, will meet thy every wish,
And all my kinsfolk shall thy servants be.' (295)

'Nay, were a man desirous of thy love,
He well might glory didst thou promise him
A fourth of what thou temp'st me here withal!' (296)

'O dark-eyed love, am I not fair to see,
As the liana swaying in the woods,
As the pomegranate-tree in fullest bloom
Growing on hill-top, or the trumpet-flower
Drooping o'er mouth of island cavern? See, (297)
With crimson sandal-wood perfumed, I'll wear
Finest Benares robe for thee–O why,
O how wilt thou go far away from me?' (298)

'Ay! so the fowler seeketh to decoy
His bird. Parade thy charms e'en as thou wilt,
Ne'er shalt thou bind me to thee as of yore.' (299)

'And this child-blossom, O my husband, see
Thy gift to me-–now surely thou wilt not
Forsake her who hath borne a child to thee?' (300)

'Wise men forsake their children, wealth and kin,
Great heroes ever go forth from the world,
As elephants sever their bonds in twain.' (301)

'Then this thy child straightway with stick or axe
I'll batter on the ground–to save thyself
From mourning for thy son thou wilt not go!' (302)

'And if thou throw the child to jackals, wolves,
Or dogs, child-maker without ruth, e'en so
'Twill not avail to turn me back again!' (303)

'Why, then, go if thou must, and fare thee well.
But tell me to what village wilt thou go,
What town or burg or city is thy goal?' (304)

'In the past days we went in fellowship,
Deeming our shallow practice genuine.
Pilgrims we wandered–hamlet, city, town,
And capital–we tramped to each in turn.' (305)

'But the Exalted Buddha now doth preach,
Along the banks of the Nerañjarā, 360
The Norm whereby all may be saved from ill.
To him I go; he now my guide shall be.' (306)

'Yea, go, and take my homage unto him
Who is the supreme Sovran of the World,
And making salutation by the right, 361
Do thou from us to him make offering.' (307)

'Now meet and right is this, e'en as thou say'st,
That I in doing homage, speak for thee
To him, the Supreme Sovran of the World.
And making salutation by the right,
I'll render offering for thee and me.' (308)

So Kāla went to the Nerañjarā,
And saw the very Buddha on the bank,
Teaching the Way Ambrosial: of Ill, (309)
And of how Ill doth rise, and how Ill may
Be overpast, and of the way thereto,
Even the Ariyan, the Eightfold Path. (310)
Low at his feet the husband homage paid,
Saluted by the right and Cāpā's vows
Presented; then the world again renounced
For homeless life; the Threefold Wisdom won,
And brought to pass the bidding of the Lord. (311)



351 Pronounce Chāpā. The name of her native district has, so far, not been met
with elsewhere.
352 An Ājīvaka (-ika), described in Dialogues of the Buddha, i. 221.
353 I.e., when he left the Bo-tree as Buddha and went to preach his first
sermon at Isipatana by Benares. The meeting is told in Majjhima Nikāya, i.
170, 171, and Vinaya Texts, i. 90.
354 In the Majjhima Nikāya there is another śloka before the last above, in
which the Buddha says, 'I am worthy,' etc., thus:
'I am the Arahant [i.e., worthy] of the world, I am
The Guide supreme, the one Truly Awake.
Cool and serene I in Nibbana dwell (nibbuto).'
355 The 'holy man,' as our tradition might say. He was no Arahant in the
Buddhist sense.
356 Fortunatus.
357 His humility was due, apart from his natural disposition, to his having no
status among a group of independent huntsmen.
358 This ranked among the five 'topmost' heavens of the 'world of form,' or
Brahma-world. See Buddh. Psy., p. 334; Dīgha N., ii. 52.
359 The Commentator explains this intrusion of Nāla, a village 'in Magadha,
near the Bo-tree' (of Gayā) (see Ps. lix.), by saying it was Upaka's native
place, and that the pair had gone to live there. As he was the trappers'
middleman, and therefore in frequent communication with them, this would
locate the Vankahāra country in the forests or jungles immediately to the
south of Magadha, Gayā being in South Magadha.
360 This river flows from the watershed south of the Ganges past Gayā, and the
Buddha was coming from it when Upaka first met him. But the Buddha, in the
Commentary, is said to have awaited Upaka at Sāvatthī to the north-west. Upaka
sets out 'westward' to find him. The geography here forms a pretty crux.
Whatever may be decided by archæologists in the near future as to the site of
Sāvatthī, that site was north-westward of Gayā.
361 Keeping the right side toward the object of adoration in walking around
him.




'But the Exalted Buddha now doth preach
Along the banks of the Neraŋjarā.
To face p. 134.
LXIX
Sundarī.
She too, having made her resolve under former Buddhas, and heaping up good of
age-enduring efficacy in this and that rebirth, was reborn thirty-one æons ago,
when Vessabhu was Buddha, in a clansman's family. One day she ministered to the
Master with alms, and worshipped him, and he perceived her believing heart, and
thanked her. After celestial and other happy rebirths, her knowledge having come
to maturity, she was, in this Buddha-age, reborn at Benares as the daughter of
Sujāta, a brahmin. Because of her perfect form they called her Sundarī (Beauty).
When she grew up, her younger brother died. Her father, overmastered by grief,
and going to and fro, met the Therī Vāsiṭṭhī 362 When she asked him what
afflicted him, he answered as in the first two verses. Wishing to allay his
grief, she spoke the next two verses, and told him of her own griefless state.
The brahmin asked her: 'How, lady, did you become free from grief (a-sokā)?' The
Therī told him of the Three Jewels, the Refuges. 'Where,' he asked, 'is the
Master?' 'He is now at Mithilā.' So the brahmin drove in his carriage to Mithilā
and sought audience of the Master. To him the Master taught the Norm; and he
believed, and entered the Order, attaining Arahantship on the third day, after
strenuous effort in establishing insight.
But the charioteer drove his chariot back to Benares, and told the brahminee
what had taken place. When Sundarī heard of it, she asked her mother, saying:
'Mother, I too would leave the world.' The mother said: 'All the wealth in this
house belongs to you. You are the heiress of this family. Take up your heritage
and enjoy it. Go not forth.' But Sundarī said: 'Wealth is no use to me. Mother,
I would leave the world;' and, bringing the mother to consent, she abandoned her
great possessions like so much spittle, and entered the Order (at Benares). And
studying and striving because of the promise in her and the maturity of her
knowledge, she attained Arahantship, with thorough grasp of the Norm in form and
meaning.
Dwelling thereafter in the ease of fruition and the bliss of Nibbana, she
thought: 'I will utter a Lion's Roar 363 before the Master.' And asking
permission of her teacher, she left Benares, accompanied by a great following of
Bhikkhunīs, and in due course came to Sāvatthī, did obeisance to the Master, and
stood on one side. Welcomed by him, she declared her AÑÑĀ by extolling her
relation to him as the 'daughter of his mouth,' and so on. Thereupon all her
kinsfolk, beginning with her mother, and their attendants, renounced the world.
She, reflecting on her attainment, and using her father's utterances in her own
Psalm, exulted as follows:
Sujāta.
Dame of the brahmins, thou too in the past–
Thou knowest–'twas thy little babes 364 Death robbed
And preyed upon; and thou all night, all day
Madest thy bitter wail. Vāsiṭṭhī, say! (312)
How comes it that to-day thou, who hast lost
So many–was it seven?–all thy sons,
No more dost mourn and weep so bitterly? (313)
Vāsiṭṭhī.
Nay, brahmin, many hundreds of our babes,
And of our kinsfolk many hundred more,
Have we in all the ages past and gone
Seen preyed upon by Death, both you and I. (314)
But I have learnt how from both Birth and Death
A way there is t' escape. Wherefore no more
I mourn, nor weep, nor make my bitter wail. (315)
Sujāta.
Wondrous in sooth, Vāsiṭṭhī, are the words
Thou speakest! Whose the doctrine thou hast learnt?
Whence thine authority for speech like this? (316)
Vāsiṭṭhī.
'Tis He, the Very Wake, the Buddha, He
Who late, hard by the town of Mithilā,
Did teach the Norm, brahmin, whereby
All that hath life may put off every ill. (317)
When I, O brahmin, when I heard the Arahant
Reveal the Doctrine of the Non-Substrate,365
Forthwith the Gospel sank into my heart,
And all my mother-grief fell off from me. (318)
Sujāta.
Then I too straight will go to Mithilā,
If haply the Exalted Buddha may
Me, even me, release from every ill. (319)

The brahmin went; he saw the Awaken'd One,
Th' Emancipated, Him in whom
No base is found for rebirth, and from Him,
The Seer, Him who hath passed beyond all ill, (320)
He heard the Norm: the Truth of Ill, and how
Ill comes, and how Ill may be overpassed,
E'en by the Ariyan, the Eightfold Path,
That leadeth to the abating of all Ill. 366 (321)
Forthwith the Gospel sank into his heart.
He left the world, he chose the homeless life.
On the third night of contemplation rapt,
Sujāta touched and won the Threefold Lore. 367 (322)

'Come, charioteer, now drive this chariot home!
Wish thy good mistress health, the brahminee,
And say: "'The brahmin hath renounced the world.
On the third night of contemplation rapt
Sujāta touched and won the Threefold Lore."' (323)

And so the driver took the car and purse
Of money home, and wished his mistress health,
And said: 'The brahmin hath renounced the world.
On the third night of contemplation rapt
Sujāta touched and won the Threefold Lore.' (324)
Sundarī's Mother.
For this that thou hast heard, O Charioteer,
And tellest: that the brahmin hath attained
The Threefold Lore, no half-gift give I thee. 368
Take thou the chariot, take the horses both,
And take a thousand pieces for thy pains. (325)

'Let them remain thine own, O brahminee,
Horses and chariot and the thousand coins,
For I, too, have a mind to leave the world,
Near him of chiefest wisdom to abide.' (326)

'But thou, my Sundarī, now that thy father hath gone forth, 369
Leaving his home, renouncing all his great estate–
Cattle and horses, elephants, jewels and rings–
Dost thou at least come to thine own! Thou art the heir
Of this thy family. Do thou enjoy thy wealth.' (327)

'Cattle and horses, elephants, jewels and rings–
Ay, all that goes to make this fair and broad estate
Hath he put far from him, my father dear,
And left the world, afflicted for his son.
I, too, afflicted at my brother's death,
I have a mind like him to leave the world.' (328)

'May this, then, thine intention, Sundarī,
Thy heart's desire, be crownèd with success!
The food from hand to mouth, 370 glean'd here and there,
The patchwork robe–these things accomplishèd
Will purify in other after-world
Whate'er has poisoned life for thee in this.'371 (329)
Sundarī.
I've trained me, Lady, in the threefold course. 372
Clear shines for me the Eye Celestial.
I know the how and when I came to be
Down the long past, and where it was I lived. (330)
To thee I owe it, O thou noble friend,
Thou loveliest of the Therī Sisterhood,
That I the Threefold Lore have gotten now,
And that the Buddha's will hath been obeyed. (331)
Give to me, Lady, thy consent, for I
Would go to Sāvatthī, so that I may
Utter my 'lion's roar,'—my 'Hail, all hail!'—
In presence of the Buddha, Lord and Chief. 373 (332)




See, Sundarī, the Master fair in hue,
His countenance as fine gold, clear and bright,
Him who is All-enlightened, Buddha, Best,
Tamer of untamed, never tasting fear. (333)

And see, O Master, Sundarī, who comes
To tell thee of Emancipation won,
And of the right no more to he reborn.
Who hath herself from passion freed
Unyoked from bondage, loosened from the world.
Accomplished now is her appointed work,
And all that drugged her heart is purged away. 374 (334)



Lo! from Benares I am come to thee–
I, Sundarī, thy pupil, at thy feet,
O mighty Hero, see me worship here. (335)
Thou art Buddha! thou art Master! and thine,
Thy daughter am I, issue of thy mouth,
Thou Very Brahmin! 375 even of thy word.
Accomplished now is my appointed task,
And all that drugged my heart is purged away. (336)

'Welcome to thee, thou gracious maiden! thence
For thee 'twas but a little way to come. 376
For so they come who, victors over self,
Are fain to worship at the Master's feet,
Who also have themselves from passion freed,
Unyoked from bondage, loosened from the world,
Who have accomplished their appointed task,
And all that drugged their hearts have purged away.' (337)



362 See Ps. li.
363 An idiomatic phrase for a pæan or congratulatory or proclamatory speech.
Cf. the two discourses so named, Majjhima N., i., pp. 63. ſſ.
364 Vāsiṭṭhī, it will be remembered, is in her legend represented as losing
but one child. The Commentary, undaunted by this discrepancy, explains it by
the grief-distracted state of the father. Her name is that of a brahmin
gens–the Vāseṭṭhas–yet she is not called a brahmin in her own legend. On the
other hand, her individual point of view regarding the Dhamma is very
consistently reproduced. Dr. Neumann, ignoring the Commentary as elsewhere,
sees in Vāseṭṭhī, or Vāsiṭṭhī, the family name of Sundarī, introducing a very
baffling complication into the dramatic simplicity of the Psalm quá ballad.
365 Nirupadhi–i.e., of how to live so as to undo the conditions or bases for
rebirth. The following line reads literally: 'I, being one who had understood
the Gospel, dispelled my child-grief then and there.'
366 Ps. lix. 186.
367 See Ps. xxii. n.
368 Lit., I give thee a full bowl.
369 For this and one half the next verse (327, 328) the Pali verses become
redundant. Two are irregular in metre, one has an additional half śloka. No
gloss, apparently, has crept into the text. Conceivably the redundancy may be
intentionally used to express the abundance of her heritage–that papañca to
which the higher life, as a simplification, selection, elimination, stood in
sharp contrast.
370 See verse 349 n. Lit., food left over, scraps.
371 Tradition places this speech in the mother's mouth. Dr. Neumann's guess
ascribes it to the Bhikkhunī who receives Sundarī into the Order. But the
whole tone of it, especially the last sentiment–paraloke anāsavā–is that of
the laity's point of view. The mere routine to sustain life becomes a tapas to
win future compensations. No word is said of the real object of the religious
life–the training of the mind and emotions. And salvation here and
now—diṭṭhadhamme anāsavā—was the goal of those entering the Order. Cf. Ps.
lxx. 349, ſſ for the Sister's point of view. In this Psalm I follow the
Commentary, which does not interrupt the little drama with its expositions,
but gives them separately.
372 Cf. Ps. xlv. 104.
373 So Sundarī went with Bhikkhunīs to Sāvatthī, and, entering the Vihāra, saw
the Master sitting on the Seat of Doctrine. And, thrilled with a glory of joy
and gladness, she said a verse, as if to herself.
374 It is clear from this affirmation–viz., that she was Anāsavā– that Sundarī
was Arahant. Curiously, hers is the sole case where the attainment is not
explicitly recorded. She is only said to be tevijjā. To be Anāsavā was the
sixth and last stage in vijjā or paññā or abhiññā.

Thus she spoke, declaring her AÑÑĀ, by way of expressing her joy. Then the
Master, to relieve her nervousness, asked her: 'But whence comest thou? and
wherefore? and who is this Sundarī?' Then she made answer: 'Lo! from Benares.
. . .'
375 Brahmana! Cf. Dhammapada, ch. xxvi; Dialogues of the Buddha, i, 138-140;
Neumann, op. cit. 347, n 2.
376 She had travelled approximately rather under 300 miles for this
pilgrimage. But she was near the end of her infinitely long life.



LXX
Subhā (The Goldsmith's Daughter)
She, too, having made her resolve under former Buddhas, and heaping up good of
age-enduring efficacy, so that she had progressively planted the root of good
and accumulated the conditions of emancipation, was, in this Buddha-era, reborn
at Rājagaha as the daughter of a certain goldsmith. From the beauty of her
person she was called Subhā. Come to years of discretion, she went one day,
while the Master was at Rājagaha, and belief in him had come to her, and did
obeisance, seating herself on one side. The Master, seeing the maturity of her
moral faculties, and in accordance with her wish, taught her the Norm enshrined
in the Four Truths. She was thereby established in the fruition of Stream-entry,
which is in countless ways adorned. Later she realized the disadvantages of
domestic life, and entered the Order under the Great Pajāpatī the Gotamid,
devoting herself to the higher Paths. From time to time her relations invited
her to return to the world, urging its charms. To them thus come one day, she
set forth the danger in house-life and in the world, preaching the Norm in the
twenty-four verses below, and dismissed them cured of their desire. She then
strove for insight, purifying her faculties, till at length she won Arahantship.
As Arahant she spoke thus:
A maiden I, all clad in white, once heard (338)
The Norm, and hearkened eager, earnestly,
So in me rose discernment of the Truths.
Thereat all worldly pleasures irked me sore,
For I could see the perils that beset
This reborn compound, 'personality,'
And to renounce it was my sole desire. (339)
So I forsook my world–my kinsfolk all,
My slaves, my hirelings, and my villages,
And the rich fields and meadows spread around,
Things fair and making for the joy of life–
All these I left, and sought the Sisterhood,
Turning my back upon no mean estate. (340)

Amiss were't now that I, who in full faith
Renounced that world, who well discerned the Truth,
Who, laying down what gold and silver bring,
Cherish no worldly wishes whatsoe'er,
Should, all undoing, come to you again! (341)
Silver and gold avail not to awake, 377
Or soothe. Unmeet for consecrated lives, 378
They are not Ariyan–not noble–wealth. (342)
Whereby greed is aroused and wantonness,
Infatuation and all fleshly lusts,
Whence cometh fear for loss and many a care:
Here is no ground for lasting steadfastness. (343)
Here men, heedless and maddened with desires,
Corrupt in mind, by one another let
And hindered, strive in general enmity. (344)
Death, bonds, and torture, ruin, grief; and woe
Await the slaves of sense, and dreadful doom. (345)
Why herewithal, my kinsmen–nay, my foes–
Why yoke me in your minds with sense-desires?
Know me as one who saw, and therefore fled,
The perils rising from the life of sense. (346)
Not gold nor money can avail to purge
The poison of the deadly Āsavas.
Ruthless and murderous are sense-desires;
Foemen of cruel spear and prison-bonds. (347)
Why herewithal, my kinsmen–nay, my foes–
Why yoke me in your minds with sense-desires?
Know me as her who fled the life of sense,
Shorn of her hair, wrapt in her yellow robe. (348)
The food from hand to mouth, 379 glean'd here and there,
The patchwork robe–these things are meet for me,
The base and groundwork of the homeless life. 380 (349)

Great sages 381 spue forth all desires of sense,
Whether they be in heaven or on earth;
At peace they dwell, for they freeholders are,
For they have won unfluctuating bliss. (350)
Ne'er let me follow after worldly lusts,
Wherein no refuge is; for they are foes,
And murderers, and cruel blazing fires. 382 (351)
Oh! but an incubus is here, the haunt
Of dread and fear of death, a thorny brake,
A greedy maw it is, a path impassable,
Mouth of a pit wherein we lose our wits, (352)
A horrid shape of doom impending–such
Are worldly lusts; uplifted heads of snakes.
Therein they that be fools find their delight–
The blinded, general, average, sensual man. (353)

For all the many souls, who thus befooled
Err ignorant in the marsh of worldly lusts,
Heed not that which can limit birth and death. (354)

Because of worldly lusts mankind is drawn
By woeful way to many a direful doom–
Where ev'ry step doth work its penalty. 383 (355)

Breeders of enmity are worldly lusts,
Engendering remorse and vicious taints.
Flesh baits, to bind us to the world and death. (356)

Leading to madness, to hysteria,
To ferment of the mind, are worldly lusts,
Fell traps by Māra laid to ruin men. (357)

Endless the direful fruit of worldly lusts,
Surcharged with poison, sowing many ills,
Scanty and brief its sweetness, stirring strife,
And withering the brightness of our days. (358)

For me who thus have chosen, ne'er will I
Into the world's disasters come again,
For in Nibbana is my joy alway. (359)

So, fighting a [good] fight with worldly lusts,
I wait in hope for the Cool Blessedness,
Abiding earnest in endeavour, till
Nought doth survive that fetters me to them. (360)

THIS is my Way, the Way that leads past grief,
Past all that doth defile, the haven sure,
Even the Ariyan Eightfold Path, called Straight. 384
There do I follow where the Saints 385 have crossed. (361)
* * * * *
See now this Subhā, standing on the Norm,
Child of a craftsman in the art of gold!
Behold! she hath attained to utter calm;
Museth in rapture 'neath the spreading boughs. (362)
To-day, the eighth it is since she went forth
In faith, and radiant in the Gospel's light.
By Uppalavaṇṇā 386 instructed, lo!
Thrice wise is she and conqueror over death. (363)

Freed woman she, discharged is all her debt,
A Bhikkhunī, trained in the higher sense.
All sundered are the Bonds, her task is done,
And the great Drugs that poisoned her are purged. (364)




To her came Sakka, and his band of gods
In all their glory, worshipping Subhā,
Child of a craftsman in the art of gold,
But lord of all things that have life and breath. 387 (365)

When, on the eighth day after her ordination, she won Arahantship, attaining
fruition, seated beneath a tree, the Exalted One uttered these three verses
(362-364) in her praises, pointing her out to the Brethren. And the last verse
was added by them who recited (the canon at the Council), to celebrate Sakka's
adoration.



377 Na bodhāya na santiyā: not for enlightenment, lit., being awake, or peace.
George Eliot has lines in sympathy with Subhā:
'Nay, falter not–'tis an assured good
To seek the noblest–'tis your only good,
Now you have seen it; for that higher vision
Poisons all meaner choice for evermore.'
378 Literally, for samaṇa's or recluses (religieux).
379 Lit., left over, given as alms. Cf. Jātaka, iv. 380.
380 Cf. Ps. lxix. 329 n.
381 I read with the Commentary mahesihi. Cf. the te on next line and 361.
382 These are similes occurring in discourses ascribed to the Buddha –e.g.,
Ang. Nik., iv. 128; Saŋy. Nik., v. 112-114; iv. 189, 198; Udāna, 24; Majjh.
Nik., i. 130, etc.
383 Lit., Bringer-along of its (the way's) own affliction.
384 'Ujuko nāma so maggo.'
'Straight' is the name that Way is called. (Saŋy. Nik., i. 33.)
385 Mahesino, as in 350.
386 See Ps. lxiv.
387 Bhūtapati; issaro, lord or god of beings in the three planes of sense,
says the Commentary; presumably gods, men, and animals. Note that she is not
called Queen or Goddess, but pati (masculine).



Next: Canto XIV. Psalms of About Thirty Verses

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