41a: After the Passing of the Buddha – 1648
depicting the 550 Birth Stories (
Jātaka
), the 80 senior disciples, King
Suddhodana, father of Buddha Gotama, Queen Māyā Devī, mother of Buddha
Gotama, the seven remarkable conatals that were born or appeared at the birth
of Bodhisatta, etc. were placed there. Five hundred golden pots and 500 silvers
pots filled with water, 500 golden streamers, 500 golden lamps, 500 silver lamps
fitted with wicks of white cloth filled with scented
[1100]
oil, were also set up
inside.
Then Ven. Mahā Kassapa made a solemn wish: “May the flowers remain fresh,
may the scents retain their fragrance, may the lighted lamps remain aglow.” On
a golden sheet, he had the following inscription etched out and scaled: “At some
future date a prince named Piyadassi will be enthroned as a righteous king by
the name of Asoka. That King Asoka will spread these relics through the
southern island continent of Jambudīpa.”
After having carried out all forms of doing honour to the relics, King Ajātasattu
closed all entrances to the inner shrine wrought with the seven jewels; the same
was done to the golden shrine and the silver shrine that successively housed the
inner shrine. He locked up the outermost shrine made of copper.
Against the steel padlock he placed a big piece of ruby accompanied by an
inscription that read: “Let some needy king of some future date utilise this ruby
to meet the expenses of doing honour to the relics.”
Then Sakka, the Lord of the Devas, said to Vissakamma: “My good Vissakamma,
King Ajātasattu had done his best for the security and preservation of the relics.
You now see to the security of the depository.”
Vissakamma went to the relic depository and set up a complex mechanism
which emitted searing heat and which presented an awful sight with
interconnected moving parts. The moving parts were made of steel blades
shining like glass, which turned at the speed of whirlwinds, and which were held
by wooden statues of demons which guarded it on all sides. All these complex
rotating blades had only a single key-switch. Having thus made the relic
depository secure, Vissakamma returned to his celestial abode.
King Ajātasattu further put up stone walls around the depository as was usually
erected in the construction of a masonry monastery. Atop the walls, he covered
the whole area with a rock platform which was covered up with earth. The earth
was made into an even surface upon which a stone shrine was erected.