Jataka Vol. II: Book III. Tika-Nipāta: No. 252. Tila-Muṭṭhi-Jātaka
No. 252.
TILA-MUṬṬHI-JĀTAKA.
"Now I bethink me," etc.--This story the Master told in Jetavana, about a
passionate man. We learn that there was a Brother who was full of bitterness. No
matter how little was said to him, he fell in a rage and spoke roughly; showing
wrath, hatred, and mistrust. In the Hall of Truth the Brethren discussed the
matter. "Friend, how angry and bitter is Brother So-and-so! He goes snapping
about for all the world like salt in the fire. Though he has adopted this
peaceful religion, yet he cannot even restrain his anger." The Master heard this
and sent a brother to fetch the man in question. "Are you really as passionate
as they say?" he asked. The man said he was. Then the Master added, "This is not
the first time, Brethren, that this man has been passionate. He was just the
sane before;" and he told them an old-world tale.
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Once on a time, Brahmadatta the king of Benares had a son named Prince
Brahmadatta. Now kings of former times, though there might be a famous teacher
living in their own city, often used to send their sons to foreign countries
afar off to complete their education, that by this means they might learn to
quell their pride and highmindedness, and endure heat or cold, and be made
acquainted with the ways of the world. So did this king. Calling his boy to
him--now the lad was sixteen years old--he gave him one-soled sandals, a
sunshade of leaves, and a thousand pieces of money, with these words:
"My son, get you to Takkasilā, and study there."
[278] The boy obeyed. He bade his parents farewell, and in due course arrived at
Takkasilā. There he enquired for the teacher's dwelling, and reached it at the
time when the teacher had finished his lecture, and
p. 194
was walking up and down at the door of the house. When the lad set eyes upon the
teacher, he loosed his shoes, closed his sunshade, and with a respectful
greeting stood still where he was. The teacher saw that he was weary, and
welcomed the new-corner. The lad ate, and rested a little. Then he returned to
the teacher, and stood respectfully by him.
"Where have you come from?" he asked.
"From Benares."
"Whose son are you?"
"I am the son of the king of Benares."
"What brings you here?"
"I come to learn," replied the lad.
"Well, have you brought a teacher's fee? or do you wish to attend on me in
return for teaching you?"
"I have brought a fee with me:" and with this he laid at the teacher's feet his
purse of a thousand pieces.
The resident pupils attend on their teacher by day, and at night they learn of
him: but they who bring a fee are treated like the eldest sons in his house, and
thus they learn. And this teacher, like the rest, gave schooling to the prince
on every light and lucky day 1. Thus the young prince was taught.
Now one day, he went to bathe along with his teacher. There was an old woman,
who had prepared some white seeds, and strewed them out before her: there she
sat, watching them. The youth looked upon these white seeds, and desired to eat;
he picked up a handful, and ate them.
"Yon fellow must be hungry," thought she; but she said nothing, and sat silent.
Next day the same thing happened at the same time. Again the woman said nothing
to him. On the third day, he did it again; then the old dame cried out, saying,
"The great Teacher is letting his pupils rob me!" and uplifting her arms she
raised a lamentation.
The Teacher turned back. [279] "What is it, mother?" he asked.
"Master, I have been parching some seeds, and your pupil took a handful and ate
them! This he has done to-day, he did it yesterday, and he did it the day
before! Surely he will eat me out of house and home!"
"Don't cry, mother: I will see that you are paid."
"Oh, I want no payment, master: only teach your pupil not to do it again."
"See here, then, mother," said he; and he caused two lads to take the
p. 195
young fellow by his two hands, and smote him thrice upon the back with a bamboo
stick, bidding him take care not to do it again.
The prince was very angry with his teacher. With a bloodshot glare, he eyed him
from his head to foot. The teacher observed how angry he was, and how he eyed
him.
The youth applied himself to his work, and finished his courses. But the offence
he hid away in his heart, and determined to murder his teacher. When the time
came for him to go away, he said to him,
"O my Teacher, when I receive the kingdom of Benares, I will send for you. Then
come to me, I pray." And so he exacted a promise most affectionately.
He returned to Benares, and visited his parents, and showed proof of what he had
learnt. Said the king, "I have lived to see my son again, and while I yet live,
I will see the magnificence of his rule." So he made his son king in his stead.
When the prince enjoyed the splendour of royalty, he remembered his grudge, and
anger rose within him. "I will be the death of that fellow!" he thought, and
sent off a messenger to fetch his teacher.
"I shall never be able to appease him while he is young," thought the teacher;
so he came not. But when the prince's time of rule was half over, he thought he
could appease him then; and he came, and stood at the king's door, and sent to
say that the teacher from Takkasilā had arrived. The king was glad, and caused
the brahmin to be led in. Then his anger rose, and his eyes grew bloodshot. He
beckoned to those about him. "Ha, the place which my teacher struck still hurts
me to-day! He has come here with death written upon his forehead, [280] to die!
To-day his life must end!" and he repeated the first two verses:--
"Now I bethink me, for a few poor seeds, in days of yore,
You seized me by the arm, and beat me with a stick full sore.
Brahmin, are you in love with death, and do you nothing fear
For seizing me and beating me, that now you venture here?"
Thus he threatened him with death. As he heard, the teacher uttered the third
verse:
"The gently born 1 who uses blows ungentleness to quell--
This is right discipline, not wrath: the wise all know it well."
p. 196
"And so, great king, understand this yourself. Know that this is no just cause
for anger. Indeed, if you had not been taught this lesson by me, you would have
gone on taking cakes and sweets, fruit, and the like, until you became covetous
through these acts of theft; then by degrees you would have been lured on to
house-breaking, highway robbery, and murder about the villages; the end would
have been, that you would have been taken red-handed and haled before the king
for a public enemy and a robber; and you would have come in fear of public
punishment, when the king should say, 'Take this man, and punish him according
to his crimes.' Whence could have come all this prosperity which you now enjoy?
Is it not through me that you have attained to such magnificence?"
Thus did his teacher talk over the king. [282] And the courtiers, who stood
round, said when they heard his speech, "Of a truth, my lord, all your
magnificence really belongs to your teacher!"
At once the king recognised the goodness of his teacher, and said to him,
"All my power I give to you, my teacher! receive the kingdom!" But the other
refused, saying, "No, my lord king; I have no wish for the kingdom."
And the king sent to Takkasilā for the teacher's wife and family; he gave them
great power, and made him the royal priest; he treated him like a father, and
obeyed his admonitions; and after bestowing gifts and doing good deeds he became
destined for paradise.
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When the Master had ended this discourse, he declared the Truths:--at the
conclusion of the Truths the passionate brother attained the Fruit of the Third
Path, and many others entered on the First, or Second, or Third:--"At that time
the passionate Brother was the king; but the Teacher was I myself."
Footnotes
194:1 There are four nakkhattas called laku, 'light'; there is another reading
subhanakkhattena, 'every fair day'. The meaning is by no means clear.
195:1 The Scholiast explains what 'gentle breeding' means. It may be used of
conduct, both in men and animals; as--
"’Tis gentle to respect old age, red Goose:
Go where you will: I set your husband loose:"
p. 196 or of form, 'noble,' 'thoroughbred': as--[281]
"Your mien shows breeding, and your clear calm eye:
You must have left some noble family.
What made you wish to leave your home and wealth
To be an anchorite for your soul's health?"
and adds yet this other:
"Clad in a semblance of fair piety
But all deceitful, boldly forth leapt he,
A babbler of vain sayings, mean and base,
Intemperate, the ruin of his race."
(The last four line; occur in Sutta Nipāta, verse 89.)
Next: No. 253. Maṇi-Kaṇṭha-Jātaka
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