The story of wise Bodhisatta a merchant
From Jatak Katha
Once on a time in the city of Benares in
the Kāsi country there was a king named Brahmadatta. In those days the
Bodhisatta was born into a merchant's family, and growing up in due course,
used to journey about trading with, five hundred carts, travelling now from
east to west and now from west to east. There was also at Benares another young
merchant, a stupid blockhead, lacking resource.
Now at the time of our
story the Bodhisatta had loaded five hundred carts with costly wares of Benares
and had got them all ready to start. And so had the foolish young merchant too.
Thought the Bodhisatta, "If this foolish young merchant keeps me company
all along, and the thousand carts travel along together, it will be too much
for the road; it will be a hard matter to get wood, water, and so forth for the
men, or grass for the oxen. Either he or I must go on first." So he sent
for the other and laid his view before him, saying, "The two of us can't
travel together; would you rather go first or last?" Thought the other,
"There will be many advantages if I go on first. I shall have a road which
is not yet cut up; my oxen will have the pick of the grass; my men will have
the pick of the herbs for curry; the water will be undisturbed; and, lastly, I
shall fix my own price for the barter of my goods." Accordingly he
replied, "I will go first, my dear sir."
The Bodhisatta, on the
other hand, saw many advantages in going last, for he argued thus to
himself:--"Those who go first will level the road where it is rough,.
whilst I shall travel along the road they have already travelled; their oxen
will have grazed off the coarse old grass, whilst mine will pasture on the
sweet young growth which will spring up in its place; my men will find a fresh
growth of sweet herbs for curry where the old ones have been picked; where
there is no water, the first caravan will have to dig to supply themselves, and
we shall drink at the wells they dug. Haggling over prices is killing work;
whereas I, following later, shall barter my wares at the prices they have already
fixed." Accordingly, seeing all these advantages, he said to the other,
"Then go you first, my dear sir."
"Very well, I
will," said the foolish merchant. And he yoked his carts and set out.
Journeying along, he left human habitations behind him and came to the
outskirts of the wilderness. (Now wildernesses are of the five following
kinds:--robber wildernesses, wild-beast wildernesses, drought wildernesses,
demon wildernesses, and famine wildernesses. The first is when the way is beset
by robbers; the second is when the way is beset by lions and other wild beasts;
the third is when there is no bathing or water to be got; the fourth is when
the road is beset by demons; and the fifth is when no roots or other food are
to be found. And in this fivefold category the wilderness in question was both
a drought, and a demon, wilderness.) Accordingly this young merchant took great
big water-jars on his carts, and filling them with water, set out to cross the
sixty leagues of desert which lay before him. Now when he had reached the
middle of the wilderness, the goblin who haunted it said to himself, "I
will make these men throw away their stock of water, and devour them all when
they are faint." So he [100] framed by his magic power a delightful carriage
drawn by pure white young bulls. With a retinue of some ten or twelve goblins
bearing bows and quivers, swords and shields, he rode along to meet them like a
mighty lord in this carriage, with blue lotuses and white water-lilies wreathed
round his head, with wet hair and wet clothes, and with muddy carriage-wheels.
His attendants, too, in front and rear of him went along with their hair and
clothes wet, with garlands of blue lotuses and white water-lilies on their
beads, and with bunches of white lotuses in their hands, chewing the esculent
stalks, and dripping with water and mire. Now the leaders of caravans have the
following custom: whenever the wind blows in their teeth, they ride on in front
in their carriage with their attendants round them, in order to escape the
dust; but when the wind blows from behind them, then they ride in like fashion
in the rear of the column. And, as on this occasion the wind was blowing
against them, the young merchant was riding in front. When the goblin became
aware of the merchant's approach, he drew his carriage aside from the track and
greeted him kindly, asking him whither he was going. The leader of the caravan
too caused his carriage to be drawn aside from the track so as to let the carts
pass by, whilst he stayed by the way and thus addressed the goblin: "We
are just on our way from Benares, sir. But I observe that you have lotuses and
water-lilies on your heads and in your hands, and that your people are chewing
the esculent stalks, and that you are all muddy and dripping with wet. Pray did
it rain while you were on the road, and did you come on pools covered with
lotuses and water-lilies?"
Hereon the goblin
exclaimed, "What did you say? Why, yonder appears the dark-green streak of
the forest, and thence onward there is nothing but water all through the
forest. It is always raining there; the pools are full; and on every side are
lakes covered with lotuses and water-lilies." Then as the line of carts
passed by, he asked where they were bound for. "To such and such a
place," was the reply. "And what wares have you got in this cart and
in this?" "So and so." "And what might you have in this
last cart which seems to move as if it were heavily laden?" "Oh,
there's water in that." "You did well to carry water with you from
the other side. But there is no need for it now, as water is abundant on ahead.
So break the jars and throw the water away, that you may travel easier."
And he added, "Now continue on your way, as we have stopped too long
already." Then he went a little way further on, till he was out of sight,
when he made his way back to the goblin-city where he dwelt.
Such was the folly of that
foolish merchant that he did the goblin's bidding, and had his jars broken and
the water all thrown away,--without saving so much even as would go in the palm
of a man's hand. Then he ordered the carts to drive on. Not a drop of water did
they find on. ahead, and thirst exhausted the men. All day long till the sun
went down they kept on the march; but at sunset they unyoked their carts and
made a laager, tethering the oxen to the wheels. The oxen had no water to
drink, and the men none to cook their rice with; and the tired-out band sank to
the ground to slumber. But as soon as night fell, the goblins came out from
their city, and slew every single one of those men and oxen; and when they had
devoured their flesh, leaving only the bare bones, the goblins departed. Thus
was the foolish young merchant the sole cause of the destruction of that whole
band, whose skeletons were strewn in every conceivable direction, whilst the
five hundred carts stood there with their loads untouched.
Now the Bodhisatta allowed
some six weeks to pass by after the starting of the foolish young merchant,
before he set out. Then he proceeded from the city with his five hundred carts,
and in due course came to the outskirts of the. wilderness. Here he had his
water-jars filled and laid in an ample stock of water; and by beat of drum he
had his men assembled in camp, and thus addressed them:--"Let not so much
as a palmful of water be used without my sanction. There are poison trees in
this wilderness; so let no man among you eat any leaf, flower, or fruit which
he has not eaten before, without first asking me." With this exhortation
to his men, he pushed on into the wilderness with his 500 carts. When he had
reached the middle of the wilderness, the goblin made his appearance on the
Bodhisatta's path as in the former case. But, as soon as he became aware of the
goblin, the Bodhisatta saw through him; for he thought to himself,
"There's no water here, in this 'Waterless Desert.' This person with his
red eyes and aggressive bearing, casts no shadow. Very likely he has induced
the foolish young merchant who preceded me, to throw away all his water, and
then, waiting till they were worn out, has eaten up the merchant with all his
men. But he doesn't know my cleverness and ready wit." Then he shouted to
the goblin, "Begone! We're men of business, and do not throw away what
water we have got, before we see where more is to come from. But, when we do
see more, we may be trusted to throw this water away and lighten our
carts."
The goblin rode on a bit
further till he was out of sight, and then betook himself back to his home in
the demon city. But when the goblin had gone, the Bodhisatta's men said to him,
"Sir, we heard from those men that yonder is the dark-green streak of the
forest appearing, where they said it was always raining. They had got lotuses
on their heads and water-lilies in their hands and were eating the stalks,
whilst their clothes and hair were wringing wet, with water streaming off them.
Let us throw away our water and get on a bit quicker with lightened
carts." On hearing these words, the Bodhisatta ordered a halt and had the
men all mustered. "Tell me," said he; "did any-man among you
ever hear before today that there was a lake or a pool in this
wilderness?" "No, sir," was the answer, "why it's known as
'the Waterless Desert'."
"We have just been
told by some people that it is raining just on ahead, in the belt of forest;
now how far does a rain-wind carry?" "A league, sir." "And
has this rain-wind reached any one man here?" "No, sir."
"How far off can you see the crest of a storm-cloud?" "A league,
sir." "And has any one man here seen the top of even a single
storm-cloud?" "No, sir." "How far off can you see a flash
of lightning?" "Four or five leagues, sir." "And has any
one man here seen a flash of lightning?" "No, sir." How far off
can a man hear a peal of thunder?" "Two or three leagues, sir."
"And has any man here heard a peal of thunder?" "No, sir."
"These are not men but goblins. They will return in the hope of devouring
us when we are weak and faint after throwing away our water at their bidding.
As the young merchant who went on before us was not a man of resource, most
likely he has been fooled into throwing his water away and has been devoured
when exhaustion ensued. We may expect to find his five hundred carts standing
just as they were loaded for the start; we shall come on them today. Press on
with all possible speed, without throwing away a drop of water."
Urging his men forward with
these words, he proceeded on his way till he came upon the 500 carts standing
just as they had been loaded and the skeletons of the men and oxen lying strewn
in every direction. He had his carts unyoked and ranged in a circle so as to
form a strong laager; he saw that his men and oxen had their supper early, and
that the oxen were made to lie down in the middle with the men round them; and
he himself with the leading men of his band stood on guard, sword in hand,
through the three watches of the night, waiting for the day to dawn. On the morrow
at daybreak when he had had his oxen fed and everything needful done, he
discarded his own weak carts for stronger ones, and his own common goods for
the most costly of the derelict goods. Then he went on to his destination,
where he bartered his stock for wares of twice or three times their value, and
came back to his own city without losing a single man out of all his company.
[104] This story ended, the
Master said, "Thus it was, layman, that in times past the fatuous came to
utter destruction, whilst those who clave to the truth, escaping from the
demons' hands, reached their goal in safety and came back to their homes
again." And when he had thus linked the two stories together, he, as the
Buddha, spoke the following stanza for the purposes of this lesson on the
Truth:
Then some declared the
sole, the peerless truth; But otherwise the false logicians spake.
Let him that 's wise from
this a lesson take,
And firmly grasp the sole,
the peerless truth.
Thus did the Blessed One
teach this lesson respecting Truth. And he went on to say: "What is called
walking by truth, not only bestows the three happy endowments, the six heavens
of the realms of sense, and the endowments of the higher Realm of Brahma, but
finally is the giver of Arahatship whilst what is called walking by untruth
entails re-birth in the four states of punishment or in the lowest castes of
mankind." Further, the Master went on to expound in sixteen ways the Four
Truths 1, at the close of which all those five hundred disciples were
established in the Fruit of the First Path 2.
Having delivered his lesson
and his teaching, and having told the two stories and established the connexion
linking them together, the Master concluded by identifying the Birth as
follows:--"Devadatta was the foolish young merchant. of those days; his
followers were the followers of that merchant; the followers o the Buddha were
the followers of the wise merchant, who was myself."
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