Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Khuddaka Nikaya - Jataka - Dukanipata - Ekapada Jataka

Jataka Vol. II: Book II. Dukanipāta: No. 238. Ekapada-Jātaka



No. 238.
EKAPADA-JĀTAKA.
[236] "Tell me one word," etc.--This story the Master told in Jetavana, about a
certain landowner.
We are told that there was a landowner who lived at Sāvatthi. One day, his son
sitting on his hip asked him what is called the "Door 1" question. He replied,
"That question requires a Buddha; nobody else can answer it." So he took his son
to Jetavana, and saluted the Master. "Sir," said he, "as my son sat on my hip,
he asked me the question called the 'Door.' I didn't know the answer, so here I
am to ask you to give it." Said the Master, "This is not the first time, layman,
that the lad has been a seeker after the way to accomplish his ends, and asked
wise men this question; he did so before, and wise men in olden days gave him
the answer; but by reason of the dimness caused by rebirth, he has forgotten
it." And at his request the Master told a tale of the olden time.
_____________________________
Once upon a time, when Brahmadatta was reigning in Benares, the Bodhisatta came
into this world as a rich merchant's son. He grew up, and when in course of time
the father died, he took his father's place as a merchant.
p. 164
And his son, a young boy, sitting on his hip, asked him a question, "Father,"
said he, "tell me a thing in one word which embraces a wide range of meaning;"
and he repeated the first stanza:--
"Tell me one word that all things comprehends:
By what, in short, can we attain our ends?"
His father replied with the second:--
"One thing for all things precious--that is skill:
Add virtue and add patience, and you will
Do good to friends and to your foes do ill."
[237] Thus did the Bodhisatta answer his son's question. The son used the way
which his father pointed out to accomplish his purposes, and by and bye he
passed away to fare according to his deserts.
_____________________________
When this discourse was ended, the Master declared the Truths and identified the
Birth:--at the conclusion of the Truths father and son reached the Fruit of the
First Path:--"This man was then the son, and I was the merchant of Benares
myself."



Footnotes
163:1 This question referred to the means of entering on the Paths.



Next: No. 239. Harita-Māta-Jātaka

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