7: The Attainment of Buddhahood – 356
1. First, he let loose a violent cyclone. Immediately, the east wind, the
west wind, the south wind and the north wind started rising in force and
although they were capable of breaking and blasting away mountain
tops of sizes measuring a half league, one league, two or three leagues,
and uprooting trees and jungle bushes and also pulverising villages and
towns in the surrounding area, they became powerless on coming near
the Bodhisatta and were incapable of even ruffling the edge of his robe
on account of the glory and power of the Bodhisatta’s deeds of merit.
[306]
2. Māra expectently looked about with the thought: “By this time, the
ascetic Gotama should have been carried away by the storm missiles
discharged by me and dashed against the Cakkavāḷa mountain range
and broken into smithereens.” He became much troubled in mind on
seeing the Bodhisatta seated as he was, unshaken like a firmly erected
gate post. So, thinking: “I will kill him by drowning him in the very
strong currents of water,” he made the rain clouds rise in a moment and
a torrential rain fell. This great earth turned into a hollow depression
by the force of the rainfall commanded by Māra. When this torrent of
water, after eroding and overflowing the fringe of forests and hills and
trees, reached the Bodhisatta, it was incapable of even wetting a single
thread of his robe, it changed its course and flowed away elsewhere
without touching him.
3. On seeing the said phenomenon, Māra, thinking: “I will turn this Prince
Siddhattha into dust by hitting him with stones,” caused to fall a rain of
stones. Stones of very large sizes came falling through the sky like huge
mountain tops, sending off fumes of dust. On nearing the Bodhisatta,
they became big celestial garlands and balls of flowers.
4. Thereafter, with the thought: “I will cause death to this Prince
Siddhattha, I will kill him, by making mince meat of him,” Māra caused
a rain of weapons to fall. All kinds of weapons, such as single-edged
and double-edged spears and knifes, etc., emitting fumes and flames
and flying through the sky, only for them to fall in the form of jasmine
flowers, etc., in the Mahā Bodhi tree area.
5. Although Māra had intended that: “Prince Siddhattha will become like
a heap of minced meat,” he was struck with wonder when he saw Prince