2: The Bodhisatta’s Youth – 274
When the prince took up his residence in this palace, and when it was time for
playing in the water, pebbles were thrown onto the sheets of buffalo hides,
mentioned above, to produce roaring sounds similar to that of thunder; water
pumped up to the ceilings trickled down in drops through the fine holes therein
as if it were raining. At that time, the prince, wearing blue garments and robes
and adorning himself in blue, revelled in water, enjoying its coolness for the day
in the company of 40,000 attendants and followers who were also dressed and
adorned in blue with their bodies perfumed.
On the four sides of the Suramma summer palace were four ponds in which the
water was emerald green, cool and clean and covered all over with the five
kinds of lotuses. Aquatic birds, such as swans, ducks, herons, etc., of various
hues, rising from the ponds on the east, flew across the palace making melodious
sounds continuously, and went down and gambolled in the pond on the west. In
this manner, these water birds from the west pond flew to the east, those from
the north lake to the south and those from the south pond to the north and so on.
The summer palace, even during the summer months, was pleasant as in the
rainy season.
3. The Rainy Season Palace.
There were seven tiers in the spire of the palace named Subha. The structure and
room formations were so designed as to be of medium size, neither too low nor
too high and neither too wide nor too narrow, in order to generate both heat and
cold. The main door and windows were designed to suit both the cold and hot
seasons, some fitted with closely knit planks and some with holes and wire
meshes. There were paintings of blazing fires and flames and also pictures of
lakes and ponds. Garments, robes and carpets, which would suit both the cold
and heat, forming an assortment of apparels used in the two previously
mentioned palaces, were kept ready to be used. Some of the doors and windows
were open by day and closed by night; and others were kept closed by day and
open by night.
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The beauty and perfection of this palatial mansion for the rainy season was identical
with that of the summer and winter residences.