The Life Stories of the Female Lay Disciples – 2255
insisted: “Look there yourself!” And she looked and exclaimed: “Dear husband,
what you say is true. Those things do look like gold!”
Puṇṇasīha stood up and picking up a clod of the yellow earth, struck it against
the shaft of his plough. It was a soft lump of gold and stuck to the shaft like a
lump of molasses. He called and said to his wife, showing a sample of gold:
“Dear wife, other people have to wait three or four months to reap what they
sow. For us, our meritorious deed, sown on the fertile soil that is Ven. Sāriputta
have now brought us this harvest. Throughout this field of about two acres there
is not a piece of earth the size of a myrobalan fruit which has not turned into
gold.”
“What should we do about this?” his wife asked.
“Dear wife,” Puṇṇasīha replied, “we cannot hide this amount of gold.” So saying,
he picked up clods of earth, filled the vessel, which was used to carry his meal,
with lumps of gold, and went to the palace and showed it to the king.
King: Where did you get this gold?
Puṇṇasīha: Great King, the field I ploughed today has been turned into clods of
gold. May the king send his men take it.
King: What is your name?
Puṇṇasīha: Great King, my name is Puṇṇa.
Then the king ordered his men to yoke carts and go and collect the gold from
Puṇṇasīha’s field.
The Family of Puṇṇasīha Attain Stream-Entry
The king’s men collected the clods of gold, saying: “This is what the great past
merit of the king has brought into being.” The gold clods instantly changed back
into clods of earth! Not a piece of gold was collected by them. They reported the
matter to the king. King Bimbisāra told them: “In that case, men, say: ‘This is
what Puñña’s great past merit has brought into being,’ when you pick up those
clods.” The men went back, said the words as instructed by the king when
collecting the gold and were successful in obtaining the gold.
The clods of gold, taken in many cartloads, were piled on the main square of the
palace. When heaped up it was the height of that of a palmyra tree. The king