Jataka Vol. I: Book I.--Ekanipāta: No. 61. Asātamanta-Jātaka
No. 61.
ASĀTAMANTA-JĀTAKA.
[285] "In lust unbridled."--This story was told by the Master while at Jetavana,
about a passion-tost Brother. The Introductory Story will be related in the
Ummadanti-jātaka 1. But to this Brother the Master said, "Women, Brother, are
lustful, profligate, vile, and degraded. Why be passion-tost for a vile woman?"
And so saying, he told this story of the past.
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p. 148
Once on a time when Brahmadatta was reigning in Benares, the Bodhisatta came to
life as a brahmin in the city of Takkasilā in the Gandhāra country; and by the
time he had grown up, such was his proficiency in the Three Vedas and all
accomplishments, that his fame as a teacher spread through all the world.
In those days there was a brahmin family in Benares, unto whom a son was born;
and on the day of his birth they took fire and kept it always burning, until the
boy was sixteen. Then his parents told him how the fire, kindled on the day of
his birth, had never been allowed to go out; and they bade their son make his
choice. If his heart was set on winning entrance hereafter into the Realm of
Brahma, then let him take the fire and retire with it to the forest, there to
work out his desire by ceaseless worship of the Lord of Fire. But, if he
preferred the joys of a home, they bade their son go to Takkasilā and there
study under the world-famed teacher with a view to settling down to manage the
property. "I should surely fail in the worship of the Fire-God," said the young
brahmin; "I'll be a squire." So he bade farewell to his father and mother, and,
with a thousand pieces of money for the teacher's fee, set out for Takkasilā.
There he studied till his education was complete, and then betook himself home
again.
Now his parents grew to wish him to forsake the world and to worship the
Fire-God in the forest. Accordingly his mother, in her desire to despatch him to
the forest by bringing home to him the wickedness of women, was confident that
his wise and learned teacher would be able to lay bare the wickedness of the sex
to her son, and so she asked whether he had quite finished his education. "Oh
yes," said the youth.
[286] "Then of course you have not omitted the Dolour Texts?" "I have not learnt
those, mother." "How then can you say your education is finished? Go back at
once, my son, to your master, and return to us when you have learnt them," said
his mother.
"Very good," said the youth, and off he started for Takkasilā once more.
Now his master too had a mother,--an old woman of a hundred and twenty years of
age,--whom with his own hands he used to bathe, feed and tend. And for so doing
he was scorned by his neighbours,--so much so indeed that he resolved to depart
to the forest and there dwell with his mother. Accordingly, in the solitude of a
forest he had a hut built in a delightful spot, where water was plentiful, and
after laying in a stock of ghee and rice and other provisions, he carried his
mother to her new home, and there lived cherishing her old age.
Not finding his master at Takkasilā, the young brahmin made enquiries, and
finding out what had happened, set out for the forest, and presented himself
respectfully before his master. "What brings you
p. 149
back so soon, my boy?" said the latter. "I do not think, sir, I learned the
Dolour Texts when I was with you," said the youth. "But who told you that you
had to learn the Dolour Texts?" "My mother, master," was the reply. Hereon the
Bodhisatta reflected that there were no such texts as those, and concluded that
his pupil's mother must have wanted her son to learn how wicked women were. So
he said to the youth that it was all right, and that he should in due course be
taught the Texts in question. "From to-day," said he, "you shall take my place
about my mother, and with your own hands wash, feed and look after her. As you
rub her hands, feet, head and back, be careful to exclaim, 'Ah, Madam! if you
are so lovely now you are so old, what must you not have been in the heyday of
your youth!' And as you wash and perfume her hands and feet, burst into praise
of their beauty. Further, tell me without shame or reserve every single word my
mother says to you. Obey me in this, and you shall master the Dolour Texts;
disobey me, and you shall remain ignorant of them for ever."
Obedient to his master's commands, the youth did all he was bidden, and so
persistently praised the old woman's beauty that she thought he had fallen in
love with her; and, blind and decrepit though she was, passion was kindled
within her [287]. So one day she broke in on his compliments by asking, "Is your
desire towards me?" "It is indeed, madam," answered the youth; "but nay master
is so strict." "If you desire me," said she, "kill my son!" "But how shall I,
that have learned so much from him, how shall I for passion's sake kill my
master?" "Well then, if you will be faithful to me, I will kill him myself."
(So lustful, vile, and degraded are women that, giving the rein to lust, a hag
like this, and old as she was, actually thirsted for the blood of so dutiful a
son!)
Now the young brahmin told all this to the Bodhisatta, who, commending him for
reporting the matter, studied how much longer his mother was destined to live.
Finding that her destiny was to die that very day, he said, "Come, young
brahmin; I will put her to the test." So he cut down a fig-tree and hewed out of
it a wooden figure about his own size, which he wrapped up, head and all, in a
robe and laid upon his own bed,--with a string tied to it. "Now go with an axe
to my mother," said he; "and give her this string as a clue to guide her steps."
So away went the youth to the old woman, and said, "Madam, the master is lying
down indoors on his bed; I have tied this string as a clue to guide you; take
this axe and kill him, if you can." "But you won't forsake me, will you?" said
she. "Why should I?" was his reply. So she took the axe, and, rising up with
trembling limbs, groped her way along by the string, till she thought she felt
her son. Then she bared the head of the figure, and--thinking to kill her son at
a single blow--
p. 150
brought down the axe right on the figure's throat,--only to learn by the thud
that it was wood! "What are you doing, mother?" said the Bodhisatta. With a
shriek that she was betrayed, the old woman fell dead to the ground. For, says
tradition, it was fated that she should die at that very moment and under her
own roof.
Seeing that she was dead, her son burnt her body, and, when the flames of the
pile were quenched, graced her ashes with wild-flowers. Then with the young
brahmin he sat at the door of the hut and said, "My son, there is no such
separate passage as the 'Dolour Text.' [288] It is women who are depravity
incarnate. And when your mother sent you back to me to learn the Dolour Texts,
her object was that you should learn how wicked women are. You have now
witnessed with your own eyes my mother's wickedness, and therefrom you will see
how lustful and vile women are." And with this lesson, he bade the youth depart.
Bidding farewell to his master, the young brahmin went home to his parents. Said
his mother to him, "Have you now learnt the Dolour Texts?"
"Yes, mother."
"And what," she asked, "is your final choice? will you leave the world to
worship the Lord of Fire, or will you choose a family life?" "Nay," answered the
young brahmin; "with my own eyes have I seen the wickedness of womankind; I will
have nothing to do with family life. I will renounce the world." And his
convictions found vent in this stanza:--
In lust unbridled, like devouring fire,
Are women,--frantic in their rage.
The sex renouncing, fain would I retire
To find peace in a hermitage.
[289] With this invective against womankind, the young brahmin took leave of his
parents, and renounced the world for the hermit's life,--wherein winning the
peace he desired, he assured himself of admittance after that life into the
Realm of Brahma.
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"So you see, Brother," said the Master, "how lustful, vile, and woe-bringing are
women." And after declaring the wickedness of women, he preached the Four
Truths, at the close whereof that Brother won the Fruit of the First Path.
Lastly, the Master chewed the connexion and identified the Birth by saying,
"Kāpilānī 1 was the mother of those days, Mahā-Kassapa was the father, Ānanda
the pupil, and I myself the teacher."
Footnotes
147:1 No. 527.
150:1 Her history is given in J. R. A. S. 1893, page 786.
Next: No. 62. Aṇḍabhūta-Jātaka
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