Chapter 35
saying: ‚O Brahmin what are you doing?‛ The brahmin replied: ‚O Gotama, I am clearing
the farmland.‛ With only a few such words on the first day, the Buddha went away.
The next day, too, the Buddha went to the brahmin and asked him what he was doing.
The brahmin replied that he was ploughing the field. After hearing this reply the Buddha
went away.
Again, the next day and the following days, the Buddha asked the brahmin what he was
doing and he replied that he was sowing seeds, planting seedlings, weeding or looking after
the field. The Buddha heard the brahmin
’s
answers which were appropriate to his work and
went away,
In this way, owing to the frequency of the Buddha's visit, the brahmin began to like and
adore the Buddha. Wanting to make the Buddha his friend he said: ‚O Gotama, you have
been visiting me since the day I cleared my farmland. If the farm yields good and abundant
crops, I will share them with you. I will not consume them without giving you. From today
you have become my friend.‛
Then one day the crop on the brahmin’s field became ripe and mature and he decided to
have them reaped the next day. But, while he was making preparations for the harvesting,
rain fell heavily at night and swept away all the crops. So the whole farmland was stark
barren like a field with all its crops removed.
Since the very day of his first visit, the Buddha had foreseen that the crops would come
to nothing. But, if he started visiting the brahmin only after the destruction of the crops,
His sermon would fall on deaf ears. He had, therefore, been visiting the brahmin from the
day when the latter cleared the field, in this way the Buddha hoped to gain the brahmin’s
confidence and intimacy that would make him receptive to the sermon to be given on the
day when the crops were ruined.
The brahmin went early to his field and seeing his farmland stark empty, he was
overwhelmed with grief.
‚The monk Gotama has been visiting me since I cleared my field. I have told him
that I will give Him a share of the crops after harvesting, that I will not consume
them all by myself without giving Him and that He has become my friend. Now
my desire will remain unfulfilled.‛
So thinking, he returned home, ate nothing and lay down on his bed.
Then the Buddha went to the brahmin’s house. When the brahmin heard of the Buddha's
coming, he told the people in his house to bring his friend inside and to give Him a seat.
They did according to his instructions. The Buddha sat down and asked where the brahmin
was. They answered that he was lying on his bed in the room. Thereupon, He told them to
bring the brahmin. The brahmin came and sat at a suitable place. Then He asked the
brahmin what was wrong with him.
The brahmin said: ‚O Gotama! you have been visiting me ever since I cleared my
farmland, I have promised to share the crops with You when they come out well. But now
my desire cannot be fulfilled and I am overwhelmed with anguish. I did not want even to
eat my meal.‛
Then the Exalted One asked: ‚O Brahmin! Do you know why there arises grief in you?‛
The brahmin said: ‚I do not know, Gotama. But do you know?‛ The Exalted One replied:
‚Yes, I do. Grief and fear arises from craving.‛ Then the Buddha preached the following
verse.
TaÓhÈya jÈyatÊ soko
taÓhÈya jÈyatÊ bhayaÑ.
TaÓhÈya vippamuttassa
natthi soko kuto bhayaÑ.
O Brahmin, grief arises from craving. From craving arises fear. There is not
the least grief in a person who has become free from craving through