Miscellaneous Topics – 2427
7. Great King, a recluse, who has only the eight requisites as his possession,
moves freely without being stopped, interrogated or arrested on the road
where robbers waylay or security officers patrol. This is the seventh
blessing of a recluse.
By this is explained the comfort that comes from harmless travelling on
the road where robbers or security men are waiting.
8. Great King, a recluse who has only the eight requisites as his possession
can go wherever he likes without taking a long look back at his old place.
Such possibility of freely moving about is the eighth blessing of a recluse
who has no possessions.
By this is explained the comfort that comes from freely going about
without yearning for his old place.
King Arindama interrupted Paccekabuddha Soṇaka’s discourse on the blessings
of a recluse and asked: “Though you are speaking in praise of the blessings of a
recluse, I cannot appreciate them as I am always in pursuit of pleasures. I cherish
sensual pleasures, both human and divine. In what way can I gain human and
divine existence?” Paccekabuddha Soṇaka replied that those who relish
sensuality are destined to be reborn in unhappy
[1510]
abodes, and only those
who abandon it are not destined to be reborn there. By way of an illustration, he
told the story of a crow that joyously rode on a dead elephant, but floated into
the ocean and lost its life. The Paccekabuddha then spoke of the blemishes of
sensual pleasures and departed, travelling through the air.
Being immensely moved by spiritual urgency (
saṁvega
) as a result of the
Paccekabuddha’s exhortation, King Arindama handed over the kingship to his
son Dīghāvu and left for the Himālayas. After becoming a recluse, he lived on
fruits and cultivated and developed absorption (
jhāna
) through meditation on
the four sublime modes of living (
Brahma-vihāra
): loving-kindness (
mettā
),
compassion (
karuṇā
), sympathetic joy (
muditā
) and equanimity (
upekkhā
), and
was reborn in the Brahma realm.
The Nine Disadvantages of a Layman’s Clothes
The nine disadvantages of a layman’s clothes are:
1. The costliness of the garment.
2. It is available only through connection with its maker.