Chapter 44
making her offerings to the Paccekabuddha, five hundred farm workers, who were
watching the field, offered some honey to the Paccekabuddha and made their wish
that in their future existence they be reborn as the sons (five hundred of them all)
of the young lady.)
The Paccekabuddha then rose into the sky even while the girl was watching Him and
returned to GandamÈdÈna mountain where He placed the lotus flowers at the entrance to
Nandam|la Cave, for use by all Paccekabuddhas as a door-mat at the foot of the flight of
steps.
In Her Existence as Queen PadumadevÊ
As the result of that good deed, when future UppalavaÓÓÈ TherÊ passed away from that
existence, and was reborn, by instantaneous full-grown birth, as a deva. There, in her own
existence, a lotus flower arose from the earth at her foot at every step she made. When she
passed away from this deva existence, she was reborn in the human world from a lotus
flower in a big lake of lotus flowers at the foot of a mountain. A recluse living nearby,
early one morning, went to the lake to wash his face and saw a lotus flower in bud which
was already bigger than other buds. While the other buds had opened up their petals into
full bloom, this bud remained in bud. He thought it strange and so he went into the lake
and plucked it.
While in his hand, the big bud opened its petals and inside he saw a female child lying.
He felt a curious sense of paternal love for the child. He took her to the hermitage along
with the lotus flower, and put her on a small cot. Thanks to the past merits of the baby girl,
milk oozed out from the big thumb of the recluse with which he nursed her. When the first
lotus flower that she lay on became withered, a new lotus flower was placed underneath
her.
When the young girl could walk and romp about, lotus flowers appeared from the earth,
under her feet wherever she went. She had a saffron-coloured complexion. Her personal
charm was super-human and would nearly equal that of a celestial maiden. Since she was
born from the lotus, her foster father, the good recluse, named her PadumavatÊ (Miss
Lotus). Whenever the recluse went out in search of fruit, she was left alone at the
hermitage.
PadumavatÊ becomes A Queen
When PadumavatÊ came of age, one day, when the recluse was out gathering fruit, a
hunter who happened to come to the hermitage saw her and thought: ‚There is no human
being on earth as beautiful as this girl. I must find out what she is.‛ And so he awaited for
the return of the recluse. When the recluse was seen returning, the girl went out to meet
him, took the yoke (laden with fruits) and the water pot from him, had her foster father
seated and attended on him lovingly.
The hunter was now sure that the girl was, in fact, a human being, and after paying
homage to the recluse, he sat. The recluse gave him fruits and water, then asked him: ‚Are
you going to stay in the forest or, are you going back to your home?‛
The hunter said: ‚I have no business in the future, Sir, I am going back to my home.‛
‚Could you keep this experience of your meeting with the girl to yourself without letting
anyone know about it?‛
‚If you would rather not let others know about this, Sir, why should I tell others?‛ But he
said this merely to please his kind host. On his way home, after paying respect to the
recluse, he carefully carved on the trees and arranged some branches along his way from
the hermitage so that he could recognize his path.
And back at the city, he went to see the King who asked the purpose of his visit. He said:
‚Great King, I am your humble servant, a hunter. I come to report to you the presence of a
most remarkable woman in the forest at the foot of the mountain, who would surely be an
asset for Your Majesty.‛ He explained the circumstance of his discovery to the King. The