35b: Stories about Wrong View– 1207
this pit of red-hot embers, I will not turn back. Only vouchsafe to take the food I
bring.” And so saying he repeated this verse:
Far rather will I headlong plunge amain full in this gulf of hell, than stoop
to shame! Vouchsafe, sir, at my hands to take this alms!
With these words the Bodhisatta, grasping the bowl of food, strode on with
undaunted resolution right on to the surface of the pit of fire. But even as he did
so, there rose up to the surface through all the 80 cubits of the pit’s depth a large
and peerless lotus-flower, which received the feet of the Bodhisatta! And from it
there came a measure of pollen which fell on the head of the Great Being, so
that his whole body was as it were sprinkled from head to foot with dust of gold!
Standing right in the heart of the lotus, he poured the dainty food into the bowl
of the Paccekabuddha.
And when the latter had taken the food and returned thanks, he flung his bowl
aloft into the heavens, and right in the sight of all the people he himself rose
bodily into the air likewise, and passed away to the Himālayas again, seeming to
tread a track formed of clouds fantastically shaped. And Māra, too, defeated
and dejected, passed away back to his own abode.
But the Bodhisatta, still standing in the lotus, taught
[234]
the truth to the people,
extolling alms giving and the commandments; after which, girt round by the
escorting multitude, he passed into his own mansion once more. And all his life
long he did charity and other good works, till in the end he passed away to fare
according to his deserts.
The Taming of Nandopananda
This account of Ven. Mahā Moggallāna’s taming of Nandopananda, the
Nāga King, is taken from the Exposition of the Super-Powers (
Iddhi-
niddesa
) in the Path of Purification (
Visuddhi-magga
), and from the
commentary on Mahā Moggallāna’s Verses of the Elder Monks (
Thera-
gāthā
, Thg 1149-1217).
Once, after hearing the Buddha’s Dhamma talk, the merchant, Anāthapiṇḍika,
invited the Buddha: “Exalted Buddha, please accept, together with 500 monks,
an alms giving at my house tomorrow.” Having the Buddha’s acceptance, the
merchant returned home.