26a: The 8th Rains Retreat (Prince Bodhi) – 893
architect and deprive others of having a similar palace built. He was thinking of
doing away with the builder either by killing him, or by cutting off his hands
and feet or extracting his eyes.
Prince Bodhi happened to confide his brutal plot against the carpenter to one of
his close boyhood friends, named Sañjikaputta, who was of kindly disposition
and considerate. Sañjikaputta felt certain Prince Bodhi meant what he said, but
he was quite against the idea of destroying an innocent man of arts and crafts of
such great prominence. He made up his mind to avert the imminent danger and
so he went to the carpenter and asked: “Have you finished the work of
constructing the turreted palace for Prince Bodhi, or is there anything still left
to be done?” When the carpenter said: “All is complete,” he confided, “Prince
Bodhi wishes to do away with you, please be careful about your security.”
The master carpenter replied with words of gratitude: “Dear Lord, you have,
indeed, done very well by such kind words,” and he told him: “I will do
everything as demanded by the circumstances.” When Prince Bodhi asked him:
“Master carpenter, is there anything yet to be done in connection with the
turret?” He said: “Your majesty, it is not completed yet, there is still lot to be
done.” Whereupon, the Prince asked: “What work is left to be done?” The
carpenter said in reply: “Your majesty, details will be given later, just provide
me with the necessary timber immediately.” The prince demanded: “What kind
of timber do you want me to supply?” – “Your majesty, just light wood, light and
dry wood,” was the reply. The prince, not suspecting anything, supplied him
with light and dry wood as demanded.
The master carpenter subsequently asked the prince: “Your majesty, please do
not visit my place of work forthwith, as the kind of job I am about to handle is
very delicate, so much so that I will have no leisure to enter into conversation
with anybody, excepting my wife who is charged with the task of conveying
food.” The prince gave his consent, saying: “Very well.”
The master carpenter stayed in a work cabin and cut the soft wood to
measurement and built a “Flying Vehicle” in the form of a Garuḍa bird. On
completion of the job, he asked his wife to turn their household property into
hard cash and jewellery and to have the family kept in a state of readiness.
Prince Bodhi posted security forces around the place where the turret was
supposed to be under construction. When everything was ready, the master
carpenter had his family gather together at the workshop and after taking their