The Second Treatise on the Perfections – 2825
escaped through the king’s location, and the king had to pursue it with all his
might. After a long pursuit, he
[1644]
managed to catch the deer; he cut it into
two halves and carried them, hanging from a pole on his shoulder. Having taken
a rest for a short while under a banyan tree, he stood up to continue his journey.
At that moment, the Yakkha-like human Porisāda, who was dwelling at the
banyan tree, prevented him from going, he said: “You have now become my
prey. You must not go.”
The Yakkha-like human was not a real Yakkha. He was, in fact, the king’s
older brother, who, while an infant was caught by a Yakkhinī. But she had
no heart to eat the baby and brought him up as her own son. So he had a
Yakkha’s mental and physical behaviour. When his foster mother, the
Yakkhinī, died, he was left alone and lived like a Yakkha.
Then King Jayaddisa said: “I have an appointment with a Brahmin who has
come back from Takkasilā. I have promised him to hear his discourse. Let me go
and hear it, after which I will come back and be true to my word.” The Yakkha-
like human set him free, readily accepting the king’s assurance.
The Yakkha-like human and the king were brothers in reality. Because of
their blood relationship, which was not realized by either of them, the
former had some compassion for the latter and let him go.
The king went to hear the Brahmin’s discourse and was about to return to the
Yakkha-like human. At that moment, his son, Prince Alīnasattu, the Bodhisatta,
pleaded with the king that he should go on behalf of his father. As the son
insisted, the father allowed him to go. The king’s word: “I will come back,” had
to be kept and made true after it had been spoken; so it was a truth that entails a
follow-up after one has spoken (
pacchānurakkhaṇa-sacca
).
The Birth Story about Rāma’s Father, King Dasaratha
The Birth Story about Rāma’s Father, King Dasaratha (
Dasaratha-jātaka
, Ja
461), in brief: After giving birth to an older son, Rāma, the younger son,
Lakkhaṇa and the daughter, Sitā Devī, King Dasaratha’s Chief Queen passed
away. The king took a new queen, of whom Prince Bhārata was born. The new
queen repeatedly pressed the king to hand over the throne to her own son
Bhārata. The king summoned his two senior sons and said: “I am worried about
you, you might be in danger because of the new queen and her son Bhārata. The
astrologers have told me that I would live twelve more years. So you should stay