The Life Stories of the Nuns – 2099
Eulogy about the Veḷuvana Monastery
1. Anyone who is not fortunate enough to see the Veḷuvana monastery, the
Bamboo grove residence of the Buddha, we consider them as one who has
never seen the Nandana Park of the celestial realm.
2. He or she who has seen the Veḷuvana Grove, which is so much
cherished by King Bimbisāra of Rājagaha, the people’s favourite ruler, the
cynosure of the whole world, has truly seen the Nandana Park, the
favourite resort of Sakka, the Lord of the Devas.
3. Many of the Tāvatiṁsa Devas, having abandoned the Nandana Park
and descended to Jambudīpa and cast their eyes on the Veḷuvana Grove,
are astonished and all their cares are forgotten, they are never satisfied
with seeing it.
4. That Veḷuvana Grove has appeared due to the king’s past merit and is
adorned by the Buddha’s majesty. What poet could adequately describe its
endless merits?
When Queen Khemā heard that song, although she had been to the Veḷuvana
Grove on a pleasure visit with the king, her interest in the grove was aroused
afresh. She was very keen to visit it again. She asked the king’s permission to go
there and went there with a big retinue. She chose the hour of the day that she
presumed the Buddha was surely not there, during the morning, when the
Buddha usually went to the city for collecting alms food. She roamed about the
Veḷuvana which was full of all kinds of flowering trees and fruit trees, where
bumble bees busied themselves collecting honey, and where the cuckoos sang
and the peacocks preened their feathers in the quiet seclusion of the park. She
also visited the monastic dwellings of the religiously inclined men, their meeting
halls, rest houses and walks.
She came across a youthful monastic sitting in meditation at the foot of a tree
and thought that young man should be enjoying the pleasures of life at present
and take up the religious life only in his old age. Feeling sure that the Buddha
was not in his private chamber, she went near it. Instead, the Buddha knew that
she would come and he had remained in his private chamber. He had created, by
his powers, a young maiden whose beauty surpassed that of Queen Khemā and
who was fanning him.