Chapter 45
rice.
SakulakÈyÊ attended on The King
Then, a friendly exchange of pleasantries took place between the host and his King,
whereupon the latter inquired after the wife of the host.
‚Don't you have a wife in your household?‛
‚Yes, Your Majesty, there is my wife.‛
‚Where is she now?‛
‚She is sitting in our private chamber. She does not come out because she does not know
that Your Majesty has come.‛ (This was a fact.)
Jotika thought it only proper that his wife should come and meet the King and went to his
wife, saying: ‚The King is paying us a visit. Ought you not see him?‛
SakulakÈyÊ in her reclining posture in their private chamber, replied: ‚My Lord, what sort
of person is a king?‛
‚The King is the person who rules over us.‛ SakulakÈyÊ was not pleased to learn that and
did not want to hide her displeasure. So she said: ‚We had done meritorious deeds in the
past in a wrong way. That is why we are being ruled over by someone. Our volition in the
past in doing good deeds was not genuine so that although we are wealthy we are born as
subjects to someone. Our gifts must have been made without conviction about the law of
action and its resultant. Our present state of being subjects of some ruler is the result of our
practice of charity in a sham conviction. But now, what is expected of me?‛
Said Jotika: ‚Bring the palm-leaf fan and fan the King.‛
SakulakÈyÊ obediently did as she was told. As she sat fanning the King, the odour that
wafted from the King's head-dress hurt her eyes and tears flowed from them. The King,
seeing her tears, said to Jotika: ‚Treasurer, womenfolk are short of wisdom. She is weeping
probably because she thinks the King was going to confiscate your property. Tell your wife
that I have no design on your property. Let her mind be set at ease.‛
Jotika made A Gift of A Big Ruby to The King
Jotika said to the King: ‚Great King, my wife is not weeping.‛
‚But, why, then do those tears flow from her eyes?‛
‚Great King, the odour coming from your Majesty's head-dress hurts her eyes, and so the
tears come out. She has a most delicate constitution. She has never used fire in her
everyday existence. She gets heat and light from crystals and gems. As for Your Majesty,
you are used to the light of oil lamps, I presume.‛
‚That's true, Treasurer.‛
‚In that case, Great King, from now on, may Your Majesty live by the light of a ruby.‛
And he presented the King with a priceless gem, the size of a bitter cucumber. King
BimbisÈra studies Jotika's mansion closely and, uttering his sincere comment: ‚Great
indeed is Jotika's wealth,‛ and he departed.
Jotika's Emotional Religious Awakening and Arahatship
Later on, Prince AjÈtasattu, under the evil influence of Devadattha, imprisoned his own
father, King BimbisÈra, and made him unable to walk inside his cell by cutting open his
soles and exposing the wounds to burning charcoals, and starved him to death. This, he did
to usurp the throne. No sooner had he ascended the throne, he took his big army to
confiscate Jotika's mansion by force. But, as his army got in front of the jewelled wall, the
reflection of his own forces on the wall looked as if the guards of Jotika were about to
attack him, and he dared not go near the wall.
Jotika was observing the
uposatha
that day. He had finished his meal early in the
morning and gone to the Buddha's monastery where he listened to the Buddha's sermon.
Thus, while AjÈtasattu was burning with greed, Jotika was enjoying the serenity of the