The Twenty-Four Buddhas – 212
supermundane Dhamma, all of them have passed away. Unsubstantial and futile
are all conditioned things!
[194]
In this way, Buddha Koṇāgamana, who had penetrated the four noble truths and
other Dhammas that should be known, attained Parinibbāna in the pleasance
named Pabbata. His relics were dispersed in accordance with his resolve,
reaching everywhere in Jambudīpa and were paid homage to by beings such as
humans, Devas and Brahmas.
24. The Chronicle of Buddha Kassapa
After Buddha Koṇāgamana’s attainment of Parinibbāna in this Fortunate Aeon,
the lifespan of human beings gradually decreased from 30,000 years to ten years
and increased to immeasurables. When it reached 20,000 years on its next
decline, Bodhisatta Kassapa was reborn in Tusita.
Early Life
Having complied with the request made by Devas and Brahmas to become a
Buddha, he descended to the human world to be conceived in the womb of
Dhanavatī, a Brahmin lady and wife of the Brahmin Brahmadatta in the city of
Bārāṇasī, which was ruled by King Kiki. When ten months had elapsed, the
Bodhisatta was born in Isipatana Deer Park. On his naming day, learned readers
of omens and his relatives named him Kassapa, for he was a descendant of the
clan of that name.
When the boy Kassapa came of age, he lived in three mansions: Haṁsa, Yasa
and Sirinanda. Being entertained and served by his wife Sunandā, a Brahmin
lady, who had 48,000 female attendants, he thus enjoyed a divine-like household
life for 2,000 years.
When he had seen the four omens while living a household life and when his
wife Sunandā had given birth to a son, named Vijitasena, he was stirred with
spiritual urgency and he thought to himself: “I shall renounce the world
immediately today.”
No sooner had he thought this than the Bodhisatta’s mansion rotated like a
potter’s wheel and flew up into the sky. And, like the moon coming out in the
company of the stars in autumn, it produced a very delightful light, and the
mansion moved on, with hundreds of people accompanying it as though
adorning the vault of heavens, as though exhibiting its glory, as though