The Second Treatise on the Perfections – 2814
get home safe and sound.” Then the ship that had wandered aimlessly for four
months turned back to Kurukaccha as though it were a mighty being and arrived
at Kurukaccha port within one day by virtue of the Bodhisatta’s asseveration.
This truth of Suppāraka the wise is also the truth told so that one’s wish may be
fulfilled (
icchā-pūraṇa-vacī-sacca
) as it was made to have his wish of saving the
lives of all fulfilled.
The Birth Story about King Sivi
This story is told in the Birth Story about King Sivi (
Sivi-jātaka
, Ja 499): In the
city of Ariṭṭhapura, in the Sivi country, the Bodhisatta, King Sivi, gave away
600,000 pieces daily in generosity. Even then, he was not content and thought
that he would like to give away parts of his body. In order to fulfil the king’s
desire, Sakka came down in the guise of a blind Brahmin and said to the king:
“King, both your eyes can see but mine cannot. If you would give me one of
yours, you can see with the remaining one, and I will also see with the eye given
by you. So kindly give me one of your eyes.” The king was delighted, for
someone had come to him the very moment he was thinking of giving. He
summoned his surgeon Sīvika and ordered: “Take out one of my eyes.” The
surgeon, ministers and queens all tried to dissuade him, but he stood by his order,
and Sīvika could do nothing but take out one of the king’s eyes. Looking at the
extracted eye with the one remaining, the king happily expressed his aspiration
for Perfect Self-Awakening (
Sammā-sambodhi
) and handed the gift of his eye
over to the Brahmin.
When the Brahmin, who in reality was Sakka, put the eye into his eye-socket it
fitted like it was original. King Sivi, seeing this, was so delighted that he asked
Sīvika: “Take also my other eye out.” Despite protests from his ministers, the
king had his remaining eye taken out and given to the Brahmin. The latter put
the king’s eye into the socket of his other eye which became as good as the
original. He then gave his blessings and disappeared as though he had returned
to his home.
As King Sivi became totally blind and was not fit to rule, he moved to a
dwelling place near a pond in the royal gardens, where he reflected on his act of
generosity. Sakka then came to him and walked to and fro nearby so that the
king would hear his footsteps. When the king heard him, he asked who it was.
Sakka replied: “I am Sakka. Ask for any boon you want.” – “I have plenty of