THE GREAT CHRONICLE OF BUDDHAS
1392
King was deeply interested. He marched for the foot of the mountain without losing time.
Having encamped at a place not far away from the hermitage, he awaited till the recluse
had finished his meal and went to see the recluse, accompanied by a few courtiers. The
recluse was then sitting in his hermitage where the King greeted him, exchanged courteous
words and sat in a suitable place.
The King made offering to the recluse, articles used by recluse. And then as a ‘feeler’ he
said: ‚Venerable Sir, what is the use of living here? Let us go to the city.‛ ‚I am not going,
Great King,‛ said the recluse. ‚You may go.‛ To which the King said: ‚Very well,
Venerable Sir, but I am given to understand that there is a woman in your company. It is
not proper for a woman to be living in the company of a recluse. I would request that the
woman be allowed to go with me.‛
To this direct request made by the King the recluse replied: ‚It is not easy for one to
please many people. How could my daughter fit in with the court life with its many queens
and ladies in waiting?‛
The King allayed the fear of the recluse, saying: ‚Venerable Sir, if I (am allowed to
marry her and) have given my love to her, I will make her my Chief Queen.‛
Thereupon the recluse called his daughter, as he usually addressed her since childhood:
‚PadumavatÊ, my little girl!‛ Young PadumavatÊ promptly responded; she came out of the
hermitage and, saluting her father, stood before him, who said: ‚Dear girl, you have come
of age. From the moment the King has cast his eyes on you, you should not stay here any
longer. Go along with the King, my little girl.‛
‚Very well, dear father,‛ she said, weeping, and still standing.
The King of BÈrÈÓasÊ, wishing to prove his sincerity, showered PadumavatÊ with gold,
silver and jewellery and anointed her as his Chief Queen immediately.
Queen PadumavatÊ became A Victim of Court Intrigue
At the court of BÈrÈÓasÊ, the King's heart was captivated by the Chief Queen so much so
that since her arrival, all the other queens and ladies-in-waiting were totally neglected by
the King. The womenfolk felt bitter about this and they tried to undermine the King's
affection for the Chief Queen, saying: ‚Great King, PadumavatÊ is not a human being.
Where on earth have you ever seen a human being whose every step is received by a lotus
flower arising from the earth? She is a demon, for sure. She is dangerous. She ought to be
banished forthwith!‛ The King did not say anything.
At another time, when the King was called away by duty to suppress a rising at the
remote part of the kingdom, he had to leave behind PadumavatÊ at the palace, knowing that
she was pregnant. The womenfolk at court seized this opportunity to strike. They bribed
PadumavatÊ's attendant into a wicked plot. She was instructed to remove the infant when
the Chief Queen gave birth to her child and replace it with a piece of wood smeared with
blood.
When PadumavatÊ delivered the child, Prince MahÈ Paduma was the real off-spring
whom she gave birth to, as he was the only child conceived in her womb. The other sons,
four hundred and ninety-nine of them, arose from the drops of her blood splattered about
at child birth. The attendant duly carried out the instruction and informed the news of the
Chief Queen's delivery to the other queens. The five hundred womenfolk at the court stole
one child each while their mother was still asleep after her labour. Then they ordered five
hundred wooden caskets, made by turners, to put each child in one. They placed them
inside the caskets, and put seals on each.
When Queen PadumavatÊ woke up and asked her assistant about her child, the latter
frowned and retorted: ‚When did you ever give birth to a child? This is what you have
delivered,‛ and produced the piece of wood smeared with blood. The Queen was very
unhappy and asked her to put it away quickly. The woman quickly complied as if eager to
safeguard the Queen's honour by splitting up the piece of wood and throwing it into the
fireplace in the kitchen.
The King returned from his expedition and was camping outside the city awaiting the