36: King Pukkusāti and Others – 1281
monks. With the permission of the potter, the monk entered the hut and sat
there to spend the night.
Meeting with the Buddha
At dawn on that day the Buddha surveyed the world of living beings and on
seeing Pukkusāti, the Buddha thought: “This man of good family read the
message sent by his friend King Bimbisāra and after completely renouncing his
100-league wide domain of Takkasilā, he became a monk out of reverence for
me. Today he will reach Rājagaha after travelling 192 leagues, being 45 leagues
beyond Sāvatthī. If I do not go to him, he will pass the night and die hopelessly
without attaining the lower three fruitions. If I go to him he will realize the
three lower fruitions of the noble path and become liberated. I have developed
and practised the perfections for aeons out of compassion for worthy beings. I
will now go and see him for his spiritual welfare.”
So early in the morning the Buddha cleaned his body and entered Sāvatthī with
the monks on the round for alms. In the afternoon, he left the city, rested for a
while in the fragrant chamber and thought: “This man of good family out of
reverence for me has done that which is hard for many people to do. Having
renounced the 100-league vast domain of Takkasilā, he set out alone without
even a servant to give him water for washing his face.” The Buddha thought of
this austerity of the monk and without calling Ven. Sāriputta or Ven.
Moggallāna or any other disciples, he left Sāvatthī, taking his alms bowl and
robes by himself.
The Buddha did not fly in the air or shorten the journey but went on foot as he
knew that, out of reverence for him, the monk did not travel by elephant, horse,
chariot or on a golden palanquin but went barefooted without even a slipper or a
leaf-umbrella.
With a Buddha’s splendour and all the great marks and six bodily-radiance, etc.
shrouded like the cloud-covered moon, the Buddha travelled incognito for about
six hours during the whole afternoon and covering a distance of 45 leagues, he
arrived near the potter’s hut at sunset, just after the monk Pukkusāti had entered
the hut. The Buddha arrived with his glory covered in order to enable the monk
to have complete rest, knowing that one who is tired and weary cannot absorb
the Dhamma.