The Life Stories of the Nuns – 2154
“What a question! Who can remember the number of people that have died in
this family?”
“In that case, I am not taking the oil,” she said and went to another house. She
heard the same reply there. At the third house she also heard the same reply.
Now truth dawned into her mind. “There can be no family in this city where
death has never occurred. Of course, the Buddha, the benefactor of the world,
knew it.” A spiritual urgency arose in her. She went to the country and left her
dead child there, saying: “Dear son, as a mother, I had thought quite wrongly
that death came to you alone. But death is common to everybody.”
Then, muttering this soliloquy, the meaning of which will be given later, she
went to see the Buddha (Thi-ap 22, 27):
Na gāma-dhammo no nigamassa dhammo,
na cāpiyaṁ eka-kulassa dhammo.
Sabbassa lokassa sadevakassa,
eseva Dhammo yad-idaṁ aniccatā.
She approached the Buddha who asked her: “Have you got the mustard oil?”
“I have no need for mustard oil, venerable sir, only give me firm ground to
stand upon, let me gain a foothold!”
The Buddha, spoke this verse to her (Dhp 287):
Gotamī, one who is intoxicated with children and wealth and is attached
to possessions, old and new, is carried away by Death, just as a sleeping
village is swept away by a huge flood.
At the end of the discourse, Kisā Gotamī was established in the fruition of
Stream-entry knowledge.
311
In the life story of Kisā Gotamī, when she came back from her search for the
mustard oil,
[1417]
the Buddha spoke to her in two verses (Thi-ap 22:26-27, PTS
2.566):
311
This is according to the commentary on the Collection of the Numerical Discourses
(
Aṅguttara-nikāya
).