The Twenty-Four Buddhas – 102
The lifespan then was 100,000 years and throughout that long period he saved
beings, such as humans, Devas and Brahmas, taking them out of the flood-waters
of Saṁsāra and placing them on the shore of Nibbāna.
While a lay-prince, Buddha Koṇḍañña had three palaces: Suci, Suruci and Subha.
His female attendants were 300,000.
His chief consort was Rucī Devī, and his son Vijitasena.
He reigned for 10,000 years.
He used for his renunciation the chariot drawn by thoroughbred horses.
When he became Buddha, he stayed at Candārāma.
In Buddha Koṇḍañña’s Dispensation, the earth with Arahats, whose pollutants
(
āsavas
) were destroyed and who were purified of impurities, was in splendour
like the open sky with stars and planets. That is to say, the colour of the Arahats’
robes covered the surface of the whole earth.
The Arahats were of incomparable nobility. They were not at all disturbed by
the eight vicissitudes of life; it was hard for the fiery tempered unruly people to
approach them. When these Arahats, who were endowed with great fame, were
desirous of passing into Nibbāna, they rose into the sky, about seven toddy palm
trees high, like the lightning rushes into the murky clouds. They entered upon
absorption attained with the fire-element as a meditation device (
tejo-kasiṇa-
jhāna
) and
[125]
flashing a great light completely burned themselves in the sky
and attained Parinibbāna.
The peerless glory of Buddha Koṇḍañña and his concentrated mind that was
permeated with omniscience have all vanished. Unsubstantial and futile indeed
are all conditioned things!
Buddha Koṇḍañña, who had fully realized the four noble truths, attained
Parinibbāna at Candārāma. In the same park, a shrine, seven leagues high, was
built. It was made of powdered red orpiment mixed with oil and butter and was
dedicated to him.
The unbreakable relics of the Buddha, true to the nature of long-lived
Awakened Ones, remained solid like golden images without falling into pieces.
These relics were laid in the shrine and people from all over Jambudīpa