35c: More Stories about Wrong View – 1218
good deeds of absorption (
jhāna
) that I had practised before, I will ask him now
about my good deeds in the past.” In response to his question, the Buddha told
him about his good deeds. This Brahma Baka in one of his former births was a
son of a good family. Seeing the dangers of sense desires he decided: “I will put
an end to birth, old age, sickness and death.” Thereafter, he renounced the world
and became an ascetic, developing mundane absorptions (
jhāna
)
.
Having
accomplished the absorptions which were the foundation of the super
knowledges he built a small leaf-hut near the river Ganges and spent his time
enjoying the bliss of the absorptions.
While he was staying thus, a caravan of 500 carts carrying merchants crossed a
desert frequently. When they crossed the desert by night the bullocks that were
harnessed at the foremost cart lost their way and turned back, thus coming back
to the former track that they had taken. The other carts too similarly came back
to the former track and this was known to the merchants only at dawn. For the
merchants it was the day they needed to have passed through the desert. All
their firewood and water had run out. Therefore, thinking that they were now
about to lose their lives the people unyoked their bullocks from the carts, tied
them to the wheels and went to sleep in the shade of the rear part of the carts.
The absorption-accomplished ascetic, the future Brahma Baka, got out of the
leaf-hut early in the morning. While sitting at the hut door, he had a look at the
Ganges and saw a great flood overwhelming the whole Ganges as though a huge
green stone was rolling down. When he thought: “Are there in this world any
beings that are wearied for lack of such sweet water?” he saw the caravan of
those merchants suffering in the sandy desert. Wishing them well, he resolved
through psychic powers: “May a great volume of water from the Ganges flow
towards the merchants in the caravan.”
As soon as his psychic powers occurred, a great volume of water flowed into the
desert as though into a drain. The merchants got up because of the sound of the
water. On seeing the water they were overjoyed. They bathed, they drank, and
they let the cattle drink and they finally arrived at their destination. In order to
point out this past good deed of Brahma Baka, the Buddha spoke this verse:
Yaṁ tvaṁ apāyesi bahū manusse,
pipāsite ghammani samparete,
taṁ te purāṇaṁ vata-sīla-vattaṁ,
suttappabuddho va anussarāmi.