7: The Attainment of Buddhahood – 343
The Group-of-Five monastics left the Bodhisatta about the new moon day of
April (
Citta
) and moved to Migadāya, the Deer Park.
126
When the attendant
monastics had abandoned him, the Bodhisatta, living a solitary life, gained a
considerable degree of solitude which was conducive to extraordinary progress
and strengthening of his mental concentration. Thus, living in complete
seclusion for fifteen days practising meditation and making progress in it, the
noble Bodhisatta dreamed five great dreams after midnight, just approaching
dawn on the fourteenth waxing day of the month of May (
Vesākha
) 528
BCE
.
The Five Great Dreams of the Bodhisatta
The said five great dreams were as follows:
1. He dreamed that he was sleeping with the surface of the earth as his bed, with
the Himālayas as his pillow, placing his left hand on the eastern ocean, his right
hand on the western ocean and both his legs on the southern ocean.
This first dream presaged his realization of omniscience and becoming a Buddha
among humans, Devas and Brahmas.
2. He dreamed that a species of grass (
tiriyā
) with a reddish stalk about the size
of a yoke emerged from his navel and while he was looking on, it grew up, first
half a cubit, then one cubit, one fathom, two fathoms, one mile, half of a league,
one league and so on, rising higher and higher until it touched the sky, outer
space, many thousands of leagues above and remained there.
This second dream presaged that he would be able to teach the path of eight
constituents (
aṭṭhaṅgika-magga
), which is the middle way (
majjhima-paṭipadā
),
to humans and Devas.
3. He dreamed that hordes of maggots, with white bodies and black heads,
slowly crept up his legs covering them from the tip of the toe-nail right up to the
knee-cap.
This third dream presaged that a great many people with black heads who wear
pure white clothes would adore the Buddha and take great refuge (
mahā-saraṇa-
gamana
) in him.
126
This was after the Bodhisatta had completed the practice of austere striving.