Garland of the Buddha's Past Lives (Volume 2). Aryashura

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Garland of the Buddha's Past Lives (Volume 2) - Aryashura


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      How can animals possess such conduct?

      How can they have such wide regard for virtue?

      Some design must lie behind your appearance.

      How castigated I feel by

      his gentle yet wounding behavior!

      It is I who am the animal, the ox.

      Who is this creature, a sharabha but in form?

      (25.27 [14])

      The splendor of the Bodhi·sattva’s virtue is often paralleled by his physical beauty. Likewise the geographical lo- ________

      The Bodhi·sattva is said to have once lived as a huge monkey who roamed alone on a beautiful slope on the Himavat mountain. The body of the mountain was smeared with the ointments of various glistening, multi-colored ores. Draped by glorious dense forests, as if by a robe of green silk, its slopes and borders were adorned with an array of colors and forms so beautifully variegated in their uneven distribution that they seemed to have been purposefully composed. Water poured down in numerous torrents and there was an abundance of deep caves, chasms and precipices. Bees buzzed loudly and trees bearing various flowers and fruits were fanned by a delightful breeze. It was here, in this playground of vidya·dhara spirits, that the Bodhi·sattva lived. (24.3)

      The forest effortlessly produced flowers and fruits in every season and its spotless pools of water were adorned by lotuses and lilies. Through his residence there the Bodhi·sattva furnished the area with the auspiciousness of an ascetic grove. (28.9)

      A similar conflict is expressed in “The Birth-Story of the Great Monkey’ (27), in which a fig-tree, depicted as the centerpiece of an idyllic forest scene, serves as the home of a harmonious community of monkeys in an “area seldom accessed by humans” (27.19). Here again the refined pleasures of a forest inhabited by virtuous animals act as a seduction for human beings driven by the negative emotions of desire, when a fruit from the fig-tree accidentally floats down a river to a royal party and intoxicates a king with its fragrant taste. The contrast between the (superior) pleasures of the forest and the (inferior) pleasures of human society is explored by the story in terms of differing levels of aesthetic and sensual quality:

      The combined scent of the bathing ointments,

      garlands, liquor and perfume of the women

      was dispelled by the fragrance of the fruit,

      delightful to smell and swelling with virtues. (27.9 [2])


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