The Light of Asia






Book The Seventh

     Sorrowful dwelt the King Suddhodana
     All those long years among the Sakya Lords
     Lacking the speech and presence of his Son;
     Sorrowful sate the sweet Yasodhara
     All those long years, knowing no joy of life,
     Widowed of him her living Liege and Prince.
     And ever, on the news of some recluse
     Seen far away by pasturing camel-men
     Or traders threading devious paths for gain,
     Messengers from the King had gone and come
     Bringing account of many a holy sage
     Lonely and lost to home; but nought of him
     The crown of white Kapilavastu's line,
     The glory of her monarch and his hope,
     The heart's content of sweet Yasodhara,
     Far-wandered now, forgetful, changed, or dead.

          But on a day in the Wasanta-time,
     When silver sprays swing on the mango-trees
     And all the earth is clad with garb of spring,
     The Princess sate by that bright garden-stream
     Whose gliding glass, bordered with lotus-cups,
     Mirrored so often in the bliss gone by
     Their clinging hands and meeting lips.  Her lids
     Were wan with tears, her tender cheeks had thinned;
     Her lips' delicious curves were drawn with grief
     The lustrous glory of her hair was hid—
     Close-bound as widows use; no ornament
     She wore, nor any jewel clasped the cloth—
     Coarse, and of mourning-white—crossed on her breast.
     Slow moved and painfully those small fine feet
     Which had the roe's gait and the rose-leaf's fall
     In old years at the loving voice of him.
     Her eyes, those lamps of love,—which were as if
     Sunlight should shine from out the deepest dark,
     Illumining Night's peace with Daytime's glow—
     Unlighted now, and roving aimlessly,
     Scarce marked the clustering signs of coming Spring
     So the silk lashes drooped over their orbs.
     In one hand was a girdle thick with pearls,
     Siddartha's—treasured since that night he fled.
     (Ah, bitter Night! mother of weeping days!
     When was fond Love so pitiless to love
     Save that this scorned to limit love by life?)
     The other led her little son, a boy
     Divinely fair, the pledge Siddartha left—
     Named Rahula—now seven years old, who tripped
     Gladsome beside his mother, light of heart
     To see the spring-blooms burgeon o'er the world.

          So while they lingered by the lotus-pools
     And, lightly laughing, Rahula flung rice
     To feed the blue and purple fish, and she
     With sad eyes watched the swiftly-flying cranes,
     Sighing, "O creatures of the wandering wing,
     If ye shall light where my dear Lord is hid,
     Say that Yasodhara lives nigh to death
     For one word of his mouth, one touch of him."—
     So, as they played and sighed, mother and child,
     Came some among the damsels of the Court
     Saying: "Great Princess! there have entered in
     At the south gate merchants of Hastinpur
     Tripusha called and Bhalluk, men of worth,
     Long traveled from the loud sea's edge, who bring
     Marvellous lovely webs pictured with gold,
     Waved blades of gilded steel, wrought bowls in brass,
     Cut ivories, spice, simples, and unknown birds
     Treasures of far-off peoples; but they bring
     That which doth beggar these, for He is seen!
     Thy Lord,—our Lord,—the hope of all the land
     Siddartha!  they have seen him face to face
     Yea, and have worshipped him with knees and brows,
     And offered offerings; for he is become
     All which was shown, a teacher of the wise,
     World-honoured, holy, wonderful; a Buddh
     Who doth deliver men and save all flesh
     By sweetest speech and pity vast as Heaven
     And, lo! he journeyeth hither, these do say."

          Then—while the glad blood bounded in her veins
     As Gunga leaps when first the mountain snows
     Melt at her springs—uprose Yasodhara
     And clapped her palms, and laughed, with brimming tears
     Beading her lashes.  "Oh! call quick," she cried,
     "These merchants to my purdah, for mine ears
     Thirst like parched throats to drink their blessed news.
     Go bring them in,—but if their tale be true,
     Say I will fill their girdles with much gold,
     With gems that kings shall envy; come ye too,
     My girls, for ye shall have guerdon of this
     If there be gifts to speak my grateful heart."

          So went those merchants to the Pleasure House,
     Full softly pacing through its golden ways
     With naked feet, amid the peering maids,
     Much wondering at the glories of the Court.
     Whom, when they came without the purdah's folds,
     A voice, tender and eager, filled and charmed
     With trembling music, saying: "Ye are come
     From far, fair Sirs! and ye have seen my Lord—
     Yea, worshipped—for he is become a Buddh,
     World-honoured, holy, and delivers men,
     And journeyeth hither.  Speak! for, if this be,
     Friends are ye of my House, welcome and dear."

          Then answer made Tripusha: "We have seen
     That sacred Master, Princess! we have bowed
     Before his feet; for who was lost a Prince
     Is found a greater than the King of kings.
     Under the Bodhi-tree by Phalgu's bank
     That which shall save the world hath late been wrought
     By him—the Friend of all, the Prince of all—
     Thine most, High Lady! from whose tears men win
     The comfort of this Word the Master speaks.
     Lo! he is well, as one beyond all ills,
     Uplifted as a god from earthly woes,
     Shining with risen Truth, golden and clear.
     Moreover as he entereth town by town,
     Preaching those noble ways which lead to peace,
     The hearts of men follow his path as leaves
     Troop to wind or sheep draw after one
     Who knows the pastures.  We ourselves have heard
     By Gaya in the green Tchirnika grove
     Those wondrous lips and done them reverence.
     He cometh hither ere the first rains fall."

          Thus spake he, and Yasodhara, for joy,
     Scarce mastered breath to answer: "Be it well
     Now and at all times with ye, worthy friends,
     Who bring good tidings; but of this great thing
     Wist ye how it befell?"

                         Then Bhalluk told
     Such as the people of the valleys knew
     Of that dread night of conflict, when the air
     Darkened with fiendish shadows, and the earth
     Quaked, and the waters swelled with Mara's wrath.
     Also how gloriously that morning broke
     Radiant with rising hopes for man, and how
     The Lord was found rejoicing 'neath his Tree.
     But many days the burden of release—
     To be escaped beyond all storms of doubt,
     Safe on Truth's shore—lay, spake he, on that heart
     A golden load; for how shall men—Buddh mused—
     Who love their sins and cleave to cheats of sense,
     And drink of error from a thousand springs—
     Having no mind to see, nor strength to break
     The fleshly snare which binds them—how should such
     Receive the Twelve Nidanas and the Law
     Redeeming all, yet strange to profit by,
     As the caged bird oft shuns its open door?
     So had we missed the helpful victory
     If, in this earth without a refuge, Buddh
     Winning the way had deemed it all too hard
     For mortal feet, and passed, none following him.
     Yet pondered the compassion of our Lord,
     But in that hour there rang a voice as sharp
     As cry of travail, so as if the earth
     Moaned in birth-throe "Nasyami aham bhu
     Nasyati loka! Surely I Am Lost,
     I And My Creatures:" then a pause, and next
     A pleading sigh borne on the western wind,
     "Sruyatam dharma, Bhagwat!"  Oh, Supreme
     Let Thy Great Law Be Uttered!  Whereupon
     The Master cast his vision forth on flesh,
     Saw who should hear and who must wait to hear,
     As the keen Sun gilding the lotus-lakes
     Seeth which buds will open to his beams
     And which are not yet risen from their roots;
     Then spake, divinely smiling, "Yea, I preach!
     Whoso will listen let him learn the Law."

          Afterwards passed he, said they, by the hills
     Unto Benares, where he taught the Five,
     Showing how birth and death should be destroyed,
     And how man hath no fate except past deeds,
     No Hell but what he makes, no Heaven too high
     For those to reach whose passions sleep subdued.
     This was the fifteenth day of Vaishya
     Mid-afternoon and that night was full moon.

          But, of the Rishis, first Kaundinya
     Owned the Four Truths and entered on the Paths;
     And after him Bhadraka, Asvajit, Bassav, Mahanama;
          also there
     Within the Deer-park, at the feet of Buddh,
     Yasad the Prince with nobles fifty-four
     Hearing the blessed word our Master spake
     Worshipped and followed; for there sprang up peace
     And knowledge of a new time come for men
     In all who heard, as spring the flowers and grass
     When water sparkles through a sandy plain.

          These sixty—said they—did our Lord send forth,
     Made perfect in restraint and passion-free,
     To teach the Way; but the World-honoured turned
     South from the Deer-park and Isipatan
     To Yashti and King Bimbasara's realm,
     Where many days he taught; and after these
     King Bimbasara and his folk believed,
     Learning the law of love and ordered life.
     Also he gave the Master, of free gift—
     Pouring forth water on the hands of Buddh—
     The Bamboo-Garden, named Weluvana,
     Wherein are streams and caves and lovely glades;
     And the King set a stone there, carved with this:

          "Ye dharma hetuppabhawa
          Yesan hetun Tathagato;
          Aha yesan cha yo nirodho
          Ewan wadi Maha samano.

          "What life's course and cause sustain
          These Tathagato made plain;
          What delivers from life's woe
          That our Lord hath made us know."

     And, in that Garden—said they—there was held
     A high Assembly, where the Teacher spake
     Wisdom and power, winning all souls which heard,
     So that nine hundred took the yellow robe—
     Such as the Master wears,—and spread his Law;
     And this the gatha was wherewith he closed:

          Sabba papassa akaranan;
          Kusalassa upasampada;
          Sa chitta pariyodapanan;
          Etan Budhanusasanan.

          "Evil swells the debts to pay,
          Good delivers and acquits;
          Shun evil, follow good; hold sway
          Over thyself.  This is the Way."

     Whom, when they ended, speaking so of him,
     With gifts, and thanks which made the jewels dull,
     The Princess recompensed.  "But by what road
     Wendeth my Lord?" she asked: the merchants said,
     "Yojans threescore stretch from the city-walls
     To Rajagriha, whence the easy path
     Passeth by Sona hither and the hills.
     Our oxen, treading eight slow koss a day,
     Came in one moon."

               Then the King hearing word,
     Sent nobles of the Court—well-mounted lords—
     Nine separate messengers, each embassy
     Bidden to say: "The King Suddhodana—
     Nearer the pyre by seven long years of lack,
     Wherethrough he hath not ceased to seek for thee—
     Prays of his son to come unto his own,
     The Throne and people of this longing Realm,
     Lest he shall die and see thy face no more."
     Also nine horsemen sent Yasodhara
     Bidden to say, "The Princess of thy House—
     Rahula's mother—craves to see thy face
     As the night-blowing moon-flower's swelling heart
     Pines for the moon, as pale asoka-buds
     Wait for a woman's foot: if thou hast found
     More than was lost, she prays her part in this,
     Rahula's part, but most of all thyself."
     So sped the Sakya Lords, but it befell
     That each one, with the message in his mouth,
     Entered the Bamboo-Garden in that hour
     When Buddha taught his Law; and—hearing—each
     Forgot to speak, lost thought of King and quest,
     Of the sad Princess even; only gazed
     Eye-rapt upon the Master; only hung
     Heart-caught upon the speech, compassionate,
     Commanding, perfect, pure, enlightening all,
     Poured from those sacred lips.  Look! like a bee
     Winged for the hive, who sees the mogras spread
     And scents their utter sweetness on the air,
     If he be honey-filled, it matters not;
     If night be nigh, or rain, he will not heed;
     Needs must he light on those delicious blooms
     And drain their nectar; so these messengers
     One with another, hearing Buddha's words,
     Let go the purpose of their speed, and mixed,
     Heedless of all, amid the Master's train.
     Wherefore the King bade that Udayi go—
     Chiefest in all the Court, and faithfullest,
     Siddartha's playmate in the happier days—
     Who, as he drew anear the garden, plucked
     Blown tufts of tree-wool from the grove and sealed
     The entrance of his hearing; thus he came
     Safe through the lofty peril of the place
     And told the message of the King, and hers.

          Then meekly bowed his head and spake our Lord
     Before the people: "Surely I shall go!
     It is my duty as it was my will;
     Let no man miss to render reverence
     To those who lend him life, whereby come means
     To live and die no more, but safe attain
     Blissful Nirvana, if ye keep the Law,
     Purging past wrongs and adding nought thereto,
     Complete in love and lovely charities.
     Let the King know and let the Princess hear
     I take the way forthwith."  This told, the folk
     Of white Kapilavastu and its fields
     Made ready for the entrance of their Prince.
     At the south gate a bright pavilion rose
     With flower-wreathed pillars and the walls of silk
     Wrought on their red and green with woven gold.
     Also the roads were laid with scented boughs
     Of neem and mango, and full mussuks shed
     Sandal and jasmine on the dust, and flags
     Fluttered; and on the day when he should come
     It was ordained how many elephants—
     With silver howdahs and their tusks gold-tipped—
     Should wait beyond the ford, and where the drums
     Should boom "Siddartha cometh!" where the lords
     Should light and worship, and the dancing-girls
     Where they should strew their flowers with dance and song
     So that the steed he rode might tramp knee-deep
     In rose and balsam, and the ways be fair;
     While the town rang with music and high joy.
     This was ordained and all men's ears were pricked
     Dawn after dawn to catch the first drum's beat
     Announcing, "Now he cometh!"
     But it fell Eager to be before—Yasodhara
     Rode in her litter to the city-walls
     Where soared the bright pavilion.  All around
     A beauteous garden smiled—Nigrodha named—
     Shaded with bel-trees and the green-plumed dates,
     New-trimmed and gay with winding walks and banks
     Of fruits and flowers; for the southern road
     Skirted its lawns, on this hand leaf and bloom,
     On that the suburb-huts where base-borns dwelt
     Outside the gates, a patient folk and poor,
     Whose touch for Kshatriya and priest of Brahm
     Were sore defilement.  Yet those, too, were quick
     With expectation, rising ere the dawn
     To peer along the road, to climb the trees
     At far-off trumpet of some elephant,
     Or stir of temple-drum; and when none came,
     Busied with lowly chores to please the Prince;
     Sweeping their door-stones, setting forth their flags,
     Stringing the fruited fig-leaves into chains,
     New furbishing the Lingam, decking new
     Yesterday's faded arc of boughs, but aye
     Questioning wayfarers if any noise
     Be on the road of great Siddartha.  These
     The Princess marked with lovely languid eyes,
     Watching, as they, the southward plain and bent
     Like them to listen if the passers gave
     News of the path.  So fell it she beheld
     One slow approaching with his head close shorn,
     A yellow cloth over his shoulder cast,
     Girt as the hermits are, and in his hand
     An earthen bowl, shaped melonwise, the which
     Meekly at each hut-door he held a space,
     Taking the granted dole with gentle thanks
     And all as gently passing where none gave.
     Two followed him wearing the yellow robe,
     But he who bore the bowl so lordly seemed,
     So reverend, and with such a passage moved,
     With so commanding presence filled the air,
     With such sweet eyes of holiness smote all,
     That as they reached him alms the givers gazed
     Awestruck upon his face, and some bent down
     In worship, and some ran to fetch fresh gifts,
     Grieved to be poor; till slowly, group by group,
     Children and men and women drew behind
     Into his steps, whispering with covered lips,
     "Who is he? who? when looked a Rishi thus?"
     But as he came with quiet footfall on
     Nigh the pavilion, lo! the silken door
     Lifted, and, all unveiled, Yasodhara
     Stood in his path crying, "Siddartha!  Lord!"
     With wide eyes streaming and with close-clasped hands,
     Then sobbing fell upon his feet, and lay.

          Afterwards, when this weeping lady passed
     Into the Noble Paths, and one had prayed
     Answer from Buddha wherefore-being vowed
     Quit of all mortal passion and the touch,
     Flower-soft and conquering, of a woman's hands—
     He suffered such embrace, the Master said
     "The greater beareth with the lesser love
     So it may raise it unto easier heights.
     Take heed that no man, being 'soaped from bonds,
     Vexeth bound souls with boasts of liberty.
     Free are ye rather that your freedom spread
     By patient winning and sweet wisdom's skill.
     Three eras of long toil bring Bodhisats—
     Who will be guides and help this darkling world—
     Unto deliverance, and the first is named
     Of deep 'Resolve,' the second of 'Attempt,'
     The third of 'Nomination.'  Lo!  I lived
     In era of Resolve, desiring good,
     Searching for wisdom, but mine eyes were sealed.
     Count the grey seeds on yonder castor-clump—
     So many rains it is since I was Ram,
     A merchant of the coast which looketh south
     To Lanka and the hiding-place of pearls.
     Also in that far time Yasodhara
     Dwelt with me in our village by the sea,
     Tender as now, and Lukshmi was her name.
     And I remember how I journeyed thence
     Seeking our gain, for poor the household was
     And lowly.  Not the less with wistful tears
     She prayed me that I should not part, nor tempt
     Perils by land and water.  'How could love
     Leave what it loved?' she wailed; yet, venturing, I
     Passed to the Straits, and after storm and toil
     And deadly strife with creatures of the deep,
     And woes beneath the midnight and the noon,
     Searching the wave I won therefrom a pearl
     Moonlike and glorious, such as kings might buy
     Emptying their treasury.  Then came I glad
     Unto mine hills, but over all that land
     Famine spread sore; ill was I stead to live
     In journey home, and hardly reached my door—
     Aching for food—with that white wealth of the sea
     Tied in my girdle.  Yet no food was there;
     And on the threshold she for whom I toiled—
     More than myself—lay with her speechless lips
     Nigh unto death for one small gift of grain.
     Then cried I, 'If there be who hath of grain,
     Here is a kingdom's ransom for one life
     Give Lukshmi bread and take my moonlight pearl.'
     Whereat one brought the last of all his hoard,
     Millet—three seers—and clutched the beauteous thing.
     But Lukshmi lived and sighed with gathered life,
     'Lo! thou didst love indeed!' I spent my pearl
     Well in that life to comfort heart and mind
     Else quite uncomforted; but these pure pearls,
     My last large gain, won from a deeper wave—
     The Twelve Nidanas and the Law of Good—
     Cannot be spent, nor dimmed, and most fulfil
     Their perfect beauty being freeliest given.
     For like as is to Meru yonder hill
     Heaped by the little ants, and like as dew
     Dropped in the footmark of a bounding roe
     Unto the shoreless seas, so was that gift
     Unto my present giving; and so love—
     Vaster in being free from toils of sense—
     Was wisest stooping to the weaker heart;
     And so the feet of sweet Yasodhara
     Passed into peace and bliss, being softly led."

          But when the King heard how Siddartha came
     Shorn, with the mendicant's sad-coloured cloth,
     And stretching out a bowl to gather orts
     From base-borns' leavings, wrathful sorrow drove
     Love from his heart.  Thrice on the ground he spat,
     Plucked at his silvered beard, and strode straight forth
     Lackeyed by trembling lords.  Frowning he clomb
     Upon his war-horse, drove the spurs, and dashed,
     Angered, through wondering streets and lanes of folk.
     Scarce finding breath to say, "The King! bow down!"
     Ere the loud cavalcade had clattered by:
     Which—at the turning by the Temple-wall
     Where the south gate was seen—encountered full
     A mighty crowd; to every edge of it
     Poured fast more people, till the roads were lost,
     Blotted by that huge company which thronged
     And grew, close following him whose look serene
     Met the old King's.  Nor lived the father's wrath
     Longer than while the gentle eyes of Buddh
     Lingered in worship on his troubled brows,
     Then downcast sank, with his true knee, to earth
     In proud humility.  So dear it seemed
     To see the Prince, to know him whole, to mark
     That glory greater than of earthly state
     Crowning his head, that majesty which brought
     All men, so awed and silent, in his steps.
     Nathless the King broke forth: "Ends it in this,
     That great Siddartha steals into his realm,
     Wrapped in a clout, shorn, sandalled, craving food
     Of low-borns, he whose life was as a god's,
     My son! heir of this spacious power, and heir
     Of Kings who did but clap their palms to have
     What earth could give or eager service bring?
     Thou should'st have come apparelled in thy rank,
     With shining spears and tramp of horse and foot.
     Lo! all my soldiers camped upon the road,
     And all my city waited at the gates;
     Where hast thou sojourned through these evil years
     Whilst thy crowned father mourned? and she, too, there
     Lived as the widows use, foregoing joys;
     Never once hearing sound of song or string,
     Nor wearing once the festal robe, till now
     When in her cloth of gold she welcomes home
     A beggar spouse in yellow remnants clad.
     Son! why is this?"

                "My father!" came reply,
     "It is the custom of my race."

                          "Thy race,"
     Answered the King "counteth a hundred thrones
     From Maha Sammat, but no deed like this."

          "Not of a mortal line," the Master said,
     "I spake, but of descent invisible,
     The Buddhas who have been and who shall be:
     Of these am I, and what they did I do,
     And this which now befalls so fell before,
     That at his gate a King in warrior-mail
     Should meet his son, a Prince in hermit-weeds;
     And that, by love and self-control, being more
     Than mightiest Kings in all their puissance,
     The appointed Helper of the Worlds should bow—
     As now do I—and with all lowly love
     Proffer, where it is owed for tender debts,
     The first-fruits of the treasure he hath brought;
     Which now I proffer."

                     Then the King amazed
     Inquired "What treasure?" and the Teacher took
     Meekly the royal palm, and while they paced
     Through worshipping streets—the Princess and the King
     On either side—he told the things which make
     For peace and pureness, those Four noble Truths
     Which hold all wisdom as shores shut the seas,
     Those Eight right Rules whereby who will may walk—
     Monarch or slave—upon the perfect Path
     That hath its Stages Four and Precepts Eight,
     Whereby whoso will live—mighty or mean
     Wise or unlearned, man, woman, young or old
     Shall soon or late break from the wheels of life,
     Attaining blest Nirvana.  So they came
     Into the Palace-porch, Suddhodana
     With brows unknit drinking the mighty words,
     And in his own hand carrying Buddha's bowl,
     Whilst a new light brightened the lovely eyes

     And that night entered they the Way of Peace.




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