35b: Stories about Wrong View– 1188
of.’ With this belief, they gave away even their eyes to those who came into their
presence and asked for them.”
[At the request of the monks, the Buddha related the Birth Story about
King Sivi, an event that happened in the past.]
Once upon a time, when the mighty King Sivi reigned in the city of Ariṭṭhapura
in the kingdom of Sivi, the Great Being was born as his son. They called his
name Prince Sivi. When he grew up, he went to Takkasilā and studied there;
then returning, he proved his knowledge to his father the king, and was made
viceroy by him. At his father’s death he became king himself, and, forsaking the
ways of evil, he kept the ten royal virtues and ruled in righteousness. He caused
six alms halls to be built, at the four gates, in the midst of the city, and at his
own door. He was munificent in distributing each day 600,000 pieces of money.
On the eighth, fourteenth, and fifteenth days he never missed visiting the alms
halls to see the distribution made.
Once, on the day of the full moon, the state umbrella had been lifted up early in
the morning, and he sat on the royal throne thinking over the gifts he had given.
He thought to himself: “Of all outside things there is nothing I have not given;
but this kind of giving does not content me. I want to give something which is a
part of myself. Well, this day when I go to the alms hall, I vow that if anyone
ask for something not from outside me, but name what is a part of myself, if he
should mention my very heart, I will cut open my breast with a spear, and as
though I were drawing up a water-lily, stalk and all, from a calm lake, I will pull
forth my heart dripping with blood-clots and give it him: If he should name the
flesh of my body, I will cut the flesh off my body and give it, as though I were
graving with a graving tool; let him name my blood, I will give him my blood,
dropping it in his mouth or filling a bowl with it; or again, if one say, I can’t get
my household work done, come and do a slave’s work at my home, then I will
leave my royal dress and stand without, proclaiming myself a slave, and slave’s
work I will do; should any men demand my eyes, I will tear out my eyes and
give them, as one might take out the pith of a palm tree.” Thus he thought
within himself:
“If there be any human gift that I have never made, be it my eyes, I’ll give
it now, all firm and unafraid.”