36: King Pukkusāti and Others – 1288
extremely oppressed by hunger, Pukkusāti lost his life as he was hurled into the
air. When he fell to the ground, he lay on the garbage heap like a golden statue.
After his death he was reborn in the Aviha Brahma abode and before long he
became an Arahat Brahma.
According to the Discourse concerning Ghaṭīkāra (
Ghaṭīkāra-sutta
, SN 1.50)
there were seven people who became Arahats soon after their spontaneous
(
upapatti
) rebirth in the Aviha Brahma abode. They were:
1. Upaka.
2. Palagaṇḍa.
3. Pukkusāti.
4. Bhaddiya.
5. Khaṇḍadeva.
6. Bāhuraggi.
7. Siṅgiya.
King Bimbisāra thought: “My friend King Pukkusāti renounced his kingdom
merely after reading my message and had made such a long and arduous journey.
He has done what is hard for ordinary people to do. I will honour my friend in
the way the monks are honoured.” He sent his men to all the environs of the city
to search for King Pukkusāti. The men found the king lying dead face down like
a golden statue on the garbage heap. So they returned and reported the matter to
King Bimbisāra.
King Bimbisāra went there and mourned over his friend, saying: “We did not
have the opportunity to honour our great friend while he was alive. Now he has
died without anyone to help him.” The king had the corpse carried on a small
couch, put in a proper place and not knowing how to honour a dead monk, he
sent for the bathers, clothed the body in clean white garments and ornamented
like a king.
Then the corpse was placed on a palanquin and honoured with all kinds of music
and fragrant flowers, taken to the outskirts of the city and cremated with
fragrant fire-wood. The bones were then collected and placed in a shrine
(
cetiya
).