THE GREAT CHRONICLE OF BUDDHAS
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happiness.‛ Thus, after going round RÈjagaha for alms-food, He informed the Venerable
Œnanda: ‚My dear son, Œnanda, I will be going to see Jambuka.‛
‚Glorious Buddha, is it that you are going there alone,‛ asked Œnanda. ‚That's right,
Œnanda. I will go alone,‛ replied the Buddha and went to the place of Jambuka in the
evening of that day.
The good devas considered: ‚The glorious Buddha is visiting the naked ascetic Jambuka
this evening; but that naked ascetic's abode is the great stone slab which is abominably
filthy and smelly with accumulation of excrement, urine and discarded tooth cleaners of
twigs. We should wash up the loathesome mess by a downpour of rain.‛ Thus they caused,
by means of their supernatural power, the falling, at that very instant, of a torrential rain,
which washed away all the filth and dirt from the stone slab, making it look spick and span.
Then the devas caused the falling of flowers of five colours on the stone slab.
On arrival at the place of Jambuka in the evening, the Buddha called out the naked ascetic
by his name ‘Jambuka’, who felt annoyed to be discourteously addressed ‘Jambuka’ by an
unknown person who, he thought, must be a lowly one. He retorted angrily: ‚Who is that
calling me by my name?‛ The Buddha replied: ‚I am a noble recluse.‛ Jambuka asked then:
‚What is that you want here?‛ When the Buddha said: ‚I wish you would allot Me a place
to stay for one night.‛ Jambuka replied bluntly: ‚There is no place for you at this place.‛
But the Buddha insisted: ‚O Jambuka, please do not say like this; do allot Me a place to
stay for one night. It is only natural that a recluse seeks help of a recluse, men expect help
of men and beasts expect help of their own kind.‛ Whereupon the naked ascetic asked:
‚Are you, indeed, a recluse?‛ ‚Yes, I am a noble recluse,‛ answered the Buddha. Jambuka
then queried: ‚If you are a recluse, where are the equipments of a recluse, such as gourd,
ladle for stirring fire, sacrificial threads?‛ The Buddha replied: ‚I possess the equipments
of a recluse you ask about; but thinking it is cumbersome to carry them separately while
wandering around, I take them along only inside Me.‛ Jambuka was much annoyed and
reproached the Buddha: ‚Being a recluse, how could you go wandering about without the
necessary equipments of a recluse?‛ The Buddha made a gentle reply: ‚O Jambuka, let that
be! Don't be angry with Me. Just point out a place for Me.‛ But Jambuka gave the terse
reply: ‚There is no place for you around here.‛
There was a small valley close by Jambuka's place and the Buddha asked: ‚Who stays
there?‛ ‚No one,‛ replied Jambuka. ‚If so, I want that allotted to Me,‛ said the Buddha.
Whereupon, Jambuka made a reply: ‚It is up to you to judge whether it is suitable or not,‛
implying that he had no objection for his occupation of the place but took no responsibility
whatsoever.
The Buddha placed a small mattress at a spot in the valley and sat upon it. At the first
watch of the night, four guardian devas from the CatumahÈrajika Deva realm came,
illuminating the four points of the compass and waited upon the Buddha. When Jambuka
saw the illumination he wondered what it could be. At the second watch of the night,
Sakka, King of the devas, came to attend upon the Buddha and Jambuka remained puzzled
as before. At the last watch of the night, when MahÈ BrahmÈ who had the power of
lighting one world with one finger of his, two worlds with two fingers, ten worlds with ten
fingers, came to wait upon the Buddha, illuminating the whole forest, Jambuka pondered,
as before: ‚Now, what could that illumination be!‛
When the morning came, Jambuka approached the Buddha and after courteous exchange
of greeting, sat down at an appropriate place and addressed Him: ‚O big recluse, who were
those that came to you, in the first watch of the night, lighting up the four points of the
compass?‛ ‚Jambuka, they were the four guardian devas of the CatumahÈrajika Deva
realms,‛ He replied. ‚Why did they come?‛ asked Jambuka. ‚They came to pay homage
and wait upon Me,‛ was the reply. Jambuka asked again: ‚O big recluse, how is that? Are
you superior to them?‛ ‚Yes, Jambuka, that's right, I am superior to them,‛ replied the
Buddha.
The naked ascetic Jambuka asked again: ‚O big recluse, who was the one that arrived in
the middle watch of the night?‛ ‚He was Sakka, King of the devas,‛ replied the Buddha.