The Biographical Scripture of King Aśoka
THE BIOGRAPHICAL SCRIPTURE
OF KING ASOKA
Translated from the Chinese of Samghapala 
(Taishö, Volume 50, Number 2043) 
by
Li Rongxi
Numata Center
for Buddhist Translation and Research
1993
© 1993 by Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai and Numata Center
for Buddhist Translation and Research
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored
in a retrieval system, or transcribed in any form or by any means—
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—
without the prior written permission of the publisher.
First Printing, 1993
ISBN: 0-9625618-4-3
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 92-082067
Published by
Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research
2620 Warring Street
Berkeley, California 94704
Printed in the United States of America
A Message on the Publication of
the English Tripitaka
The Buddhist canon is said to contain eighty-four thousand 
different teachings. I believe that this is because the Buddha’s 
basic approach was to prescribe a different treatment for every 
spiritual ailment, much as a doctor prescribes a different medicine 
for every medical ailment. Thus his teachings were always appropriate for the particular suffering individual and for the time 
at which the teaching was given, and over the ages not one of his 
prescriptions has failed to relieve the suffering to which it was 
addressed.
Ever since the Buddha’s Great Demise over twenty-five hundred 
years ago, his message of wisdom and compassion has spread 
throughout the world. Yet no one has ever attempted to translate 
the entire Buddhist canon into English throughout the history of 
Japan. It is my greatest wish to see this done and to make the 
translations available to the many English-speaking people who 
have never had the opportunity to learn about the Buddha’s 
teachings.
Of course, it would be impossible to translate all of the 
Buddha’s eighty-four thousand teachings in a few years. I have, 
therefore, had one hundred thirty-nine of the scriptural texts 
in the prodigious Taisho edition of the Chinese Buddhist canon 
selected for inclusion in the First Series of this translation 
project.
It is in the nature of this undertaking that the results are 
bound to be criticized. Nonetheless, I am convinced that unless 
someone takes it upon himself or herself to initiate this project, it 
will never be done. At the same time, I hope that an improved, 
revised edition will appear in the future.
It is most gratifying that, thanks to the efforts of more 
than a hundred Buddhist scholars from the East and the West,
this monumental project has finally gotten off the ground. May the 
rays of the Wisdom of the Compassionate One reach each and 
every person in the world.
August 7, 1991
NUMATAYehan
Founder of the English
Tripitaka Project
Editorial Foreword
In January, 1982, Mr. NUMATA Yehan, the founder of the Bukkyo 
Dendo Kyokai (Society for the Promotion of Buddhism), decided to 
begin the monumental task of the complete translation of the 
Taisho edition of the Chinese Buddhist canon into the English 
language. Under his leadership, a special preparatory committee 
was organized in April, 1982, and by July of the same year the 
Translation Committee of the English Tripitaka (Scriptures) was 
officially convened.
The initial Committee consisted of the following thirteen members: HANAYAMA Shoyu (Chairman); Ba n d 5 Shojun; ISHIGAMI
Zenno; KAMATA Shigeo; KANAOKA Shuyu; MAYEDA Sengaku;
NARA Yasuaki; SAYEKI Shinko; (late) SHIOIRI Ryotatsu; TAMARU
Noriyoshi; (late)TAMURA Kwansei; URYUZU Ryushin; and YUYAMA
Akira. Assistant members of the Committee were as follows:
KANAZAWA Atsushi; W atanabe Shogo; Rolf Giebel of New Zealand;
and Rudy Smet of Belgium.
Holding planning meetings on a monthly basis, the Committee 
has selected one hundred thirty-nine scriptures and texts for the 
First Series of translations, an estimated one hundred printed 
volumes in all. Scriptures and texts selected are not necessarily 
limited to those originally written in India but also include works 
written or composed in China or Japan. All the volumes in the First 
Series are scheduled for publication within the twentieth century. 
While the publication of the First Series proceeds, the scriptures and 
texts for the Second Series, which is expected to be published in the 
following ten- or twenty-year period, will be selected from among the 
remaining works; this process will continue until all the scriptures 
and texts, in Japanese as well as in Chinese, have been published.
Frankly speaking, it will take perhaps one hundred years 
or more to accomplish the English translation of the complete
Chinese and Japanese scriptures and texts, which consist of thousands of works. Nevertheless, as Mr. NUMATA wished, it is the sincere hope of the Committee that this project will continue unto 
completion, even after all its present members have passed away.
It must be mentioned here that the final object of this project 
is not academic fulfillment but the transmission of the teaching of 
the Buddha to the whole world in order to create harmony and 
peace among mankind.
More than eighty Buddhist scholars in the West and in the 
East, all well qualified to be translators of the Chinese and 
Japanese scriptures and texts, have agreed to translate certain 
selected works. It is really a great pleasure for the Committee to 
announce that more than forty-five translations have already been 
received as of the end of September, 1992.
The present members of the Translation Committee of the 
BDK English Tripitaka are HANAYAMA Shoyu (Chairman); BANDO
Shojun; ISHIGAMI Zenno; ICHISHIMA Shoshin; KAMATA Shigeo; 
KANAOKA Shuyu; MAYEDA Sengaku; NARA Yasuaki; SAYEKI
Shinko; TAMARU Noriyoshi; URYUZU Ryushin; and YUYAMA Akira. 
Assistant members are WATANABE Shogo and SUZUKI Koshin.
Commemorating the ninety-fourth birthday of Mr. NUMATA
Yehan, the Committee published the following three texts in a 
limited edition in April, 1991:
(1) The Lotus Sutra (Taisho No. 262)
(2) The Sutra on Upasaka Precepts (Taisho No. 1488)
(3) The Summary of the Great Vehicle (Taisho No. 1593)
In December, 1991, the Publication Committee headed by Prof. 
Philip Yampolsky was organized. New editions of the above volumes and the remaining texts will be published under the supervision of this Committee.
HANAYAMA Shdyu
Chairman
Translation Committee of
September 10, 1992 the BDK English Tripitaka
Publisher’s Foreword
It was in December, 1991, at the Numata Center for Buddhist 
Translation and Research in Berkeley, California, that a publication committee was established for the purpose of seeing into 
print the translations of the Chinese and Japanese Buddhist 
works in the BDK English Tripitaka Series. This committee 
will perform the duties of copyediting, formatting, proofreading, 
indexing, consulting with the translators on questionable passages, and so on—the routine duties of any publishing house. 
Represented on the committee are specialists in Sanskrit, Chinese, and Japanese, who will attempt to ensure that fidelity to the 
texts is maintained.
This Publication Committee is dedicated to the production of 
lucid and readable works that will do justice to the vision of 
Mr. NUMATA Yehan in his desire to make available to Western 
readers the major works of the Chinese and Japanese Buddhist 
canon.
“Taisho” refers to the Taisho Shinshu Daizokyo (Newly Revised Tripitaka Inaugurated in the Taisho Era), which was published during the period from 1924 to 1934. This consists of one 
hundred volumes, in which as many as 3,360 scriptures in both 
Chinese and Japanese are included. This edition is acknowledged 
to be the most complete Tripitaka of the Northern tradition of 
Buddhism ever published in the Chinese and Japanese languages.
The series number on the spine and title page of each volume 
will correspond to the number assigned to the work by the Translation Committee of the BDK English Tripitaka in Tokyo. A list of 
the volume numbers is appended at the end of the text. For the 
convenience of scholars who may wish to turn to the original texts, 
Taisho page and column numbers are provided in the left-hand 
margins of each volume. No attempt will be made to standardize
the English translations of Buddhist technical terms; these are left 
to the discretion of the individual translators.
Those participating in the work of this committee are Diane 
Ames, William Ames, Brian Galloway, David Hall, Nobuo Haneda, 
and Rev. Seishin Yamashita.
Philip Yampolsky 
Chairman
September 10, 1992 Publication Committee
Contents
A Message on the Publication of the English Tripitaka
N umata Yehan v
Editorial Foreword HANAYAMA Shôyü vii
Publisher’s Foreword Philip Yampolsky ix
Translator’s Introduction Li Rongxi 1
Chapter I The Causes of His Birth 3
Chapter II The Causes of Seeing Upagupta 21
Chapter III The Causes of Making Offerings to the
Bodhi Tree 39
The Causes of Vitasoka
Chapter IV The Causes of Kunàla 63
Chapter V The Causes of Offering Half an Am ra
Fruit to the Sangha 81
Chapter VI The Causes of the Buddha’s Prediction
Concerning Upagupta 91
Chapter VII The Causes of the Transmission of the
Dharma-pitaka by the Five Disciples of 
the Buddha 107
The Causes of Kâsyapa; The Causes of
Ânanda; The Causes of Madhyàntika;
The Causes of Sânakavâsin; The Causes
of Upagupta; The Causes of
Sànakavâsin’s Attainment of the Way
Chapter VIII The Causes of Upagupta’s Disciples 147
The Causes of the Son of a Tigress; The
Causes of Gorasa; The Causes of a
Southern Indian; The Causes of a
Northern Indian; The Causes of
Devaraksita; The Causes of the
Brahman with the View That the Ego Is
Real; The Causes of Sleepiness; The
Causes of the Provisor; The Causes ofthe Artisan; The Causes of Food and
Drink; The Causes of Contentment with
Few Desires; The Causes of the
Ràksasas; The Causes of the Tree; The
Causes of a Miser; The Causes of the
Ghost; The Causes of Being Bitten by
Vermin; The Causes of Contemplation
on a Skeleton; The Causes of Avarice;
The Causes of a Bamboo Brush; The
Causes of Parental Sentiment; The
Causes of the River; The Causes of a
Whim in Meditation; The Causes of the
Cowherds; The Causes of the
Transformed Person; The Causes of
Taking No Delight in the Dwelling
Place; The Causes of a Monk’s Pewter
Staff; The Causes of Sudarsana; The
Causes of the Fief for a Monastery; The
Causes of Dhitika
Glossary
Index
A List of the Volumes of the BDK English Tripitaka 
(First Series)
xii
185
189
195
Translator’s Introduction
In the Chinese Tripitaka there are two texts giving legendary 
accounts of the life of King Asoka (reigned ca. 265-238 B.C.E. or ca. 
273-232 B.C.E.), the third Maurya ruler of Magadha. He was the 
grandson of Candragupta, the founder of the Maurya dynasty 
(321-184 B.C.E.), which had its capital at Pataliputra. The first of 
the texts is the A-yu-wang-zhuan (Asokavadana) or Biography of
King Asoka (Taisho No. 2042), translated into Chinese in seven 
fascicles by An Faqin, a monk from Anxi (Parthia), who came to 
Luo-yang in the second year of Tai-kang (281 C.E.) during the reign 
of Emperor Wu of the Western Jin dynasty. The second text is 
Samghapala’s Chinese translation (512 C.E.) of the A-yu-wang-jing
(Asokarajasutra) or Sutra of King Asoka (T. No. 2043) in ten 
fascicles, upon which the present English translation is based.
In spite of the legendary style of the presentation, this biographical work, of which the original Sanskrit text is little known, 
gives accounts of the major events in the life of King Asoka that 
are historically verifiable through comparative studies of reliable 
written records and archaeological findings. Although the exact 
date of the original text is unascertainable, it may be said that it 
was composed no earlier than 184 B.C.E., when the Maurya dynasty 
collapsed, because this event is mentioned in the work.
In this work the last king of the Maurya dynasty is given as 
Pusyamitra, but according to Brahmanical accounts Pusyamitra 
was the name of a general of King Brhaddhanus, the last monarch 
of that dynasty. This general Pusyamitra is said to have killed the 
king, usurped the throne, and founded the Sunga dynasty in 
184 B.C.E.
Besides recounting the major events in the life of King Asoka, 
this work devotes half of its space to stories concerning the six 
patriarchs who succeeded the Buddha in transmitting the Dharma:
Mahakasyapa, Ananda, Madhyantika, Sanakavasin, Upagupta, 
and Dhitika. It also includes some other stories for the elucidation 
of the Dharma. Dhitika is unknown to Southern Buddhism and 
may be looked upon as a hint of the Mahayanist tendency of this 
work; this hint is enhanced by a sort of short dharani (incantation) 
in Chinese transliteration in Chapter VIII (which has been 
restored to the nearest possible romanized Sanskrit by my friend 
Professor Wu Baihui of the Institute of Philosophy of the Chinese 
Academy of Social Sciences).
Samghapala (459-524 C.E.), the translator of the Chinese version of the A-yu-wang-jing, was a monk from the kingdom of 
Funan (in the eastern part of present-day Thailand), who came to 
China during the Qi dynasty (479-501 C.E.) and stayed at Zhengguan Monastery in the capital, where he studied Mahayana texts 
under the Indian monk Gunabhadra and “mastered the languages 
of several countries” (see Continued Biographies of Eminent
Monks, Fasc. I, T. No. 2060). When Emperor Wu of the Liang 
dynasty came to power, he invited Samghapala in the fifth year of 
Tian-jian (506 C.E.) to translate Buddhist texts into Chinese. In the 
course of the subsequent seventeen years, he translated eleven 
Buddhist texts into Chinese, making a total of forty-eight fascicles, 
including the A-yu-wang-jing and the Vimuktimarga, with the 
assistance of Chinese Buddhist monks and lay scholars under 
imperial patronage. In the fifth year of Pu-tong (524 C.E.), he died 
of illness at the age of sixty-five at Zheng-guan Monastery.
Li Rongxi
Beijing
June 5, 1987
Chapter I
The Causes of His Birth
131b The Buddha was once staying at Bamboo Grove Monastery in 
Kalandaka’s garden near Rajagrha. One day he rose early, dressed 
himself in his robe, and, with a group of bhiksus (mendicants), 
carried his alms bowl to the city of Rajagrha to collect alms. At that 
moment, a gatha (stanza) was heard in the air:
The Buddha’s body is like a golden mountain,
Walking with the gait of an elephant king.
So serene and dignified are his features,
His face resembles the full moon.
Surrounded by a group of bhiksus,
He is proceeding to the city.
When the World-honored One had just stepped on the threshold of 
the gate while he was entering the city, there occurred various 
miraculous events: the blind recovered their sight, the deaf gained 
their hearing, the dumb could speak, and the paralyzed could 
walk; those who were confined in prisons gained liberty and those 
who bore grudges and hatred became merciful; calves were released 
spontaneously from their tethers and returned to their mothers; 
all animals—elephants, horses, cows, and so on—trumpeted, 
neighed, and mooed aloud with great delight; all birds—parrots, 
mynas, cuckoos, peacocks, and the like—caroled merrily in concord; all ornaments—rings, bracelets, hairpins, earrings, and all 
kinds of precious things—clinked melodiously of themselves in 
their cases; and all musical instruments sounded naturally. At 
that moment, the earth became clean of itself, free of all sorts 
of filth, debris, rubble, brambles, and poisonous plants; and it
quaked in six ways—when the east rose up the west sank down, 
when the west rose up the east sank down, when the south rose up 
the north sank down, when the north rose up the south sank down, 
when the center rose up the four sides sank down, when the four 
sides rose up the center sank down, and it all rolled round and 
round. Such were the wonderful and extraordinary events that 
happened then. At that moment, another stanza was heard from 
the air:
The whole earth depends 
On the four seas,
With the countries, cities, and mountains 
As its ornaments.
When the World-honored One trod on the earth,
It quaked in six ways,
Like a boat upon the seas 
Blown by a blast of wind.
When the Buddha entered the city, his divine powers caused 
i3 ic all the people to dance with delight, like water in the great 
sea agitated by the wind. All the people uttered the following 
stanza:
Of all pleasures in this world,
None surpasses that of the Buddha entering the country. 
When the earth quakes in six ways,
All rubble is removed without rem nant.
Those who are imperfect in sense organs 
Become perfect and complete.
All sorts of musical instruments 
Produce lovely songs by themselves.
The Buddha’s light shines upon all lands 
Like a thousand suns illuminating the world.
Fragrant water is sprinkled over the ground,
Which is anointed with powdered sandalwood.
This city of this country at this moment 
Is the best in decoration and adornment.
At that time the World-honored One walked to the main road, 
where there were two children, one of whom was the son of an 
agrakulika (one of prominent family) and the other the son of a 
kulika (one of good family). These two children were playing on a 
heap of sand. The first one was named Jaya and the second one 
Vijaya. When the two of them saw the Buddha marked on his body 
with the thirty-two characteristics, the first child put a handful of 
sand, as if it were cooked rice, into the Buddha’s alms bowl. While 
the second one was rejoicing at this good act with his hands joined 
palm to palm, the first one uttered the following stanza:
Endowed with great compassion by nature 
Is this person adorned with a round light 
Who is free from birth and death.
Now I remember him with one heart.
As I remember the Buddha in my mind,
I offer him this handful of sand.
When Jaya had offered the sand, he made a vow, saying, “May I 
become a cakravartin (universal monarch) by the merit of this 
good root, so that I can make extensive offerings to the Buddhadharma.”
The Buddha knew his mind and saw that his right vow would 
give rise to a superior and wonderful fruit in a future life. As the 
Buddha, the Tathagata, was the field of blessedness, he accepted 
the sand with a mind of compassion. With a smile, he emitted rays 
of different colors, blue, yellow, red, and white, either from the top 
of his head or from below his knees. The rays issuing from below 
his knees radiated to the eight hells. Those who were suffering in 
the cold hells felt warmth, and those in the hot ones enjoyed 
coolness. When the light shone upon their bodies, they were freed 
from all pains and afflictions. These beings had doubts in their 
minds: “Now we are free from suffering, but shall we stay here or 
be born somewhere else?”
At that moment the World-honored One, wishing to arouse 
good thoughts in them, produced a metamorphic figure and sent it 
to those beings. Upon seeing the metamorphic figure, they thought
in their minds, “Now we shall not be bom in other places but are 
simply liberated from suffering by the power of this person.” But 
the figure made them understand that their retribution in the 
hells had been dissolved and that they would be bom, at the 
termination of their existence in the hells, in the world of men or 
in the heavens, where they could realize right views.
The rays issuing from the top of the Buddha’s head radiated to 
132a the Four Heavenly Kings and up to the highest Akanistha heaven. 
In the rays the Buddha expounded the Dharma of suffering, 
impermanence, voidness, and non-ego, and he also uttered the 
following stanza:
Be strenuous to become a homeless recluse,
To tally with the Buddha-dharma.
Destroy the army of rebirth
As an elephant shatters a dwelling house.
If a man practices the Buddha-dharma 
Diligently and without indolence,
He will be free from birth and death 
And gain the cessation of all pain.
The Buddha’s light was able to shine upon the whole great chiliocosm and then return to his body. If the Buddha wished to recall 
past deeds, the light would enter his back; if he wished to predict 
future events, it would enter his front; if he wished to predict birth 
in the hells, it would enter his feet; if he wished to predict birth 
among animals, it would enter his ankles; if he wished to predict 
birth among the hungry ghosts, it would enter his toes; if he 
wished to predict birth among mankind, it would enter his knees; 
if he wished to predict the birth of an iron cakravartin king, it 
would enter his left palm; if he wished to predict the birth of a 
golden cakravartin king, it would enter his right palm; if he wished 
to predict birth in the heavens, it would enter his navel; if he 
wished to predict the enlightenment of a sravaka (a direct disciple 
of the Buddha), it would enter his mouth; if he wished to predict 
the enlightenment of apratyekabuddha (a self-enlightened Buddha), 
it would enter the white curl between his eyebrows; and if he
wished to predict the enlightenment of a bodhisattva (a being 
destined for full Buddhahood), it would enter the protuberance on 
his head. Each time the light returned from the great chiliocosm, 
it would first encircle the Buddha three times before it entered the 
appropriate spots of his body according to circumstances. Now as 
the Buddha smiled, the light, not without reason, entered his left 
palm after having encircled him three times.
On seeing this event, Ananda, with his hands put palm to 
palm, uttered the following stanza:
Being free from unrest and arrogance,
The Buddha turns evils into superior causes.
He never smiles without a reason,
Exposing his snow white teeth.
He knows by his wisdom 
What others are delighted to hear.
With his supreme, brilliant light,
He can dissolve others’ doubts.
The Buddha’s voice is like thunder;
His eyes are those of a bull king.
Being the superior field of blessedness for gods and men,
He should predict the reward for offering sand.
The Buddha said, “Ananda, I am not smiling without a reason. 
There is cause for the Tathagata, the Worthy and Omniscient One, 
to wear a smile. Ananda, did you see the child putting a handful 
of sand into my alms bowl?” Ananda said in reply, “Yes, I did.” The 
World-honored One said again, “A hundred years after my nirvana, 
132b this child will be born in the city of Pataliputra with the name of 
Asoka. He shall be a cakravartin king ruling over one of the four 
continents and take delight ip believing the right Dharma. He will 
build eighty-four thousand stupas to enshrine the Buddha’s relic 
bones for the benefit of many people.” The Tathagata then uttered 
the following stanza:
After I have entered nirvana,
There will be born to the Maurya family 
A king of men named Asoka,
Enjoying wide fame for taking delight in the Dharma.
With stupas containing my relic bones 
He will adorn Jambudvipa.
Such will be the reward of the merit 
Gained by offering sand to the Buddha.
The Buddha then took the sand and handed it to Ananda, saying, 
“Mix this sand with cow’s dung and spread it over the place where 
the Buddha used to walk in meditation.” Ananda then daubed the 
ground with the mixture as he was told.
Now in the city of Pataliputra there was a king by the name of 
Candragupta whose son was Bindusara; and Bindusara’s eldest 
son was Susima.
At that time, a daughter of most elegant features, the best ever 
known in the country, was born to a Brahman in the city of Campa. 
A physiognomist said in prediction, “This girl will become a queen 
and give birth to two sons. The first son will become a cakravartin
king ruling over one of the four continents, and the second one will 
be a recluse and attain enlightenment.” The Brahman was greatly 
delighted to hear this prediction.
With a desire to gain wealth and nobility, the Brahman took 
his daughter to the country of Pataliputra, adorned her with all 
kinds of ornaments, and sent word to King Bindusara, “My daughter is most elegant in features, the best ever known in the country.
I offer her to the king to be his consort.” The king accepted his offer 
and kept the girl in his harem. His other consorts in the harem, 
however, considered the matter among themselves, saying, “This 
girl is the most elegant in the country. If the king sees her, he will 
certainly be attracted by her beauty and will love us no more.” 
Thinking in this way, the royal consorts ordered the girl to serve 
the king as his barber.
Once the king ordered a shave, and while the girl was shaving 
him he fell asleep. When he woke up he was pleased with the girl 
and said to her, ‘Whatever you wish to have, you may declare it.” 
Then the girl said to the king, “I wish to have enjoyment with Your 
Majesty.” The king said, “As you are a barber and I am a king, how
can I enjoy you?” The girl replied to the king, “I am the daughter 
of a Brahman and not a barber. My father, a Brahman, intended 
me to be the king’s consort.” The king inquired, “Who has made 
you a barber?” “The royal consorts,” was the reply. The king said 
again, “You need not do this job any more.” And he took the girl to 
be his consort.
Shortly afterwards she became pregnant, and ten months 
later she gave birth to a son. As the king thought that he had 
no sorrow, he named his son Asoka (No Sorrow). As his second 
son was born at a time when he was without sorrow, he named the 
child Vitasoka (Without Sorrow). Asoka was rough and coarse in 
appearance, and his father did not like him.
At that time, King Bindusara wished to know through 
physiognomy which of his sons was competent to succeed him on 
the throne. So he summoned a heretical physiognomist named 
Pingalavatsajiva, to whom he said, “Venerable teacher, I wish to 
know through physiognomy which of my sons is competent to 
succeed me as king after my death.” Pingalavatsajiva said in reply, 
“If Your Majesty wishes to read the future of the princes, we should 
go to the Golden Palace.” King Bindusara then took the princes to 
the Golden Palace.
Asoka’s mother said to him, “Today His Majesty wishes to read 
the future of the princes. You may go to join them.” Asoka said, “As 
the king does not like me, why should I go?” His mother said, “Just 
go.” Asoka said in reply, “I shall go as you order me. But please ask 
somebody to send my food to that place.”
When Asoka was leaving the city of Pataliputra, he met a minister of the court by the name of Radhagupta, who asked Asoka, 
“Where do you intend to go?” Asoka said in reply, “Today the king 
is at the Golden Palace in order to read the future of the princes. I 
am going there.” Radhagupta then handed his good old elephant 
to Asoka so that he could ride to the Golden Palace. After arriving 
at that place, Asoka sat down on the ground among the other 
princes, who all had various kinds of food and drink contained in 
golden and silver vessels. Asoka’s mother prepared rice and cream, 
which she put in an earthenware vessel and sent to him.
King Bindusara said to the physiognomist, “You should read 
the future of the princes one by one to see who is competent to be 
king after my death.” The physiognomist pondered over the matter 
in his mind, thinking, “If I say Asoka is competent to be king, the 
king will certainly kill me, because he does not value him.” Having 
considered the matter in this way, the physiognomist said to the 
king, “For certain reasons I shall not mention any name in my 
physiognomic reading.” The king said, “Good.” Then the physiognomist said, “The prince who has the best animal for riding will be 
competent to be king.” The king said, “Go on with your prediction.” 
The physiognomist said again, “The prince who is sitting on the 
best seat will be competent to be king.” The king said again, “Go 
on with your prediction.” The physiognomist said again, “The 
prince who has the best food and drink contained in the best 
vessels will be competent to be king.”
When the princes heard these words, each of them thought 
that he had the best animal for riding, the best seat, and the best 
food and drink contained in the best vessels, and that he should be 
king. But Asoka thought in his mind, “Now this physiognomist 
refuses to mention any name in his physiognomic reading. If the 
one who has the best riding animal will be competent to be king, 
i33a then I have the best riding animal. I have the great earth as my 
seat; and I eat rice and cream, the best of foods. My vessel is made 
of earth, and what I drink is water. So far as I can see, I shall be 
king.”
The physiognomist paid a visit to [Asoka’s] mother, who asked 
him, “Who will become king after the demise of His Majesty?” He 
said in reply, “Asoka.” [Asoka’s] mother then said to the physiognomist, “If the king inquires any more about who is competent to 
be king, you should go to a distant place and not stay here. But you 
may come back when Asoka becomes king.” So the physiognomist 
went far away to some other country.
At that time, a country named Taksas'ila, which was under the 
rule of King Bindusara, attempted to rebel against his suzerainty. 
King Bindusara said to Asoka, ‘You may assemble the four divisions of troops and march to that country.” But no weapons or
provisions were given to him. When Asoka was leaving the city of 
Pataliputra with the four divisions of troops under his command, 
they asked him, “Now as we have no weapons or provisions, how 
can we go to subdue that country?” Asoka said, “If I am meritorious 
and deserve to be king, weapons and provisions should come out 
by themselves.” No sooner had he uttered these words than a gap 
opened in the earth, from which weapons and provisions emerged. 
Thus Asoka, commanding the four divisions of troops, went to 
punish Taksasila.
Upon hearing that Asoka was coming, the people of Taksasila 
came out half a yojana [one yojana is a day’s journey in an ox cart] 
to decorate the road and sprinkle scented water over the ground 
to receive Asoka, to whom they said, “We come to welcome you, 
O Prince, not to fight with you, nor do we harbor any enmity 
against His Majesty the great king. But the minister sent by 
the king is governing our country in a bad way, and we wish 
that he be recalled.” Then the people offered various gifts to Asoka 
and welcomed him to their country, as has been extensively 
related.
Asoka was again sent by the king as an envoy to the country 
of Kasi. In the country of Kasi there were two warriors, who said 
to their king, “We two are strong enough to level a mountain. When 
Asoka comes we need not serve him as his subjects.” At that 
moment, the heavenly beings voiced a warning, saying, “Asoka 
will be a cakravartin king to rule over one of the four continents. 
You should not go against him.”
Now Susima, the eldest son of King Bindusara, was returning 
from the royal gardens to the city of Pataliputra when he met on 
the way the king’s prime minister, who was bald, coming out of the 
city. To joke with him, Susima patted him on his bald crown. The 
prime minister thought, “Even now he dared to pat me on the 
head. Should he become king, he would certainly hurt me with a 
sword. It befits me to take measures to prevent him from becoming 
king.” Thus he ordered five hundred ministers to leave Susima, 
and he announced that Asoka would be a cakravartin king ruling 
over one of the four continents and that all of them should servehim together. He even agitated the people of Taksasila to rebel 
against the king, refusing to be his subjects any more.
King Bindusara dispatched Susima to subjugate the rebels, 
but when he reached that country he could not suppress the revolt. 
At that time Asoka returned home, and King Bindusara, who was 
seriously ill and on his deathbed, ordered a messenger to instruct 
Asoka to go back to Taksasila, while asking Susima to return home 
speedily, saying, “I intend to hand over state affairs to him.”
The ministers smeared Asoka’s body with the yellow juice of 
ginger to make him look as if he were sick, and they also boiled 
laksa (red dye) and kept the juice in a bowl, which they put 
someplace, while announcing that Asoka was ill.
When King Bindusara was approaching his end, the ministers 
dressed Asoka and took him to the king, to whom they said, “T his
is a prince. Your Majesty ought to give him the throne. When 
Susima returns, we shall restore the throne to him.”
Upon hearing these words, the king was greatly enraged. 
Asoka said, “If I am the legal king, let the heavenly beings crown 
me right now.” When he had said so, the heavenly beings immediately put a celestial crown on his head. At this sight, the king was 
all the more furious and died with hot blood oozing from his mouth.
Then Asoka ascended the throne; and after ascending the 
throne he appointed Radhagupta as his prime m inister
Susima was very angry to hear that Asoka had ascended 
the throne after the death of the king, and he wished to punish 
Asoka with his troops. Asoka, in his city, mobilized a great number of soldiers to guard the four gates of the city. He ordered 
two strong and valorous generals with groups of soldiers to guard 
the southern and western gates; he ordered his prime minister 
Radhagupta with a group of soldiers to guard the northern gate; 
and he himself, commanding a group of soldiers, guarded the 
eastern gate. Radhagupta made by different expedients various 
kinds of devices at the eastern gate of the city; he had figures of 
Asoka and his soldiers carved out of wood and had ditches dug in 
the ground in which smokeless fires were kept burning under 
coverings that were camouflaged by dry earth scattered over them.
Susima and his troops intended to attack the northern gate, but 
Radhagupta said to him, “Don’t attack me. You should attack the 
eastern gate. If you can kill King Asoka, I will surrender to you.” 
Listening to his suggestion, Susima directed his army to attack the 
eastern gate, where, seeing that none of the wooden figures was 
moving, he marched straight forward, fell into the fire pits, and 
burned to death.
After Susima’s death, his army commander, Bhadrayudha by 
i33c name, a brave and powerful man, led his army of more than a 
thousand soldiers to become Buddhist monks to practice the Way; 
and they attained arhatship (sainthood).
King Asoka administered state affairs, but his five hundred 
ministers disdained him. Once he said to his ministers, “Pull 
up flower and fruit trees to protect thorns and brambles.” The 
ministers said in reply, “No! We should pull up thorns and 
brambles to protect flower and fruit trees.” But Asoka repeated 
that they should pull up flower and fruit trees to protect thorns 
and brambles. Three times his ministers disobeyed him. In a fit of 
anger, Asoka drew his sword and beheaded the five hundred 
ministers.
Another time, King Asoka took five hundred maids of honor to 
j the rear garden, where there was a tree with profuse flowers and 
foliage called an asoka tree. On seeing this tree, King Asoka said, 
“I am glad that this tree bears the same name as I.”
As Asoka was physically rough and coarse, the maids did not 
wish to go near him. While he was sleeping in the garden, the 
maids, intending to displease him, plucked all the flowers and 
leaves of the tree, leaving it bare. When Asoka woke up and saw 
the bare tree, he asked the maids, “Who stripped this tree so 
completely?” The maids said in reply, ‘We did it.” In a fit of anger, 
King Asoka wrapped all the maids in bamboo screens and burned 
them to death. As he was so wicked, the people of the time called 
him Candasoka (Cruel Asoka).
The prime minister Radhagupta told King Candasoka that he 
should not personally beat or kill but should order somebody else 
to do it. Thus the king recruited an executioner. There lived then
in a village in the mountains a man good at weaving clothes, who 
had a son called by his father Girika. This young man was so 
fearsome that he was capable of doing unrighteous deeds and 
always scolded his parents. He beat everyone, male or female, in 
the household and would kill or hurt all living creatures. His trade 
was fishing and hunting, and as he did so much slaughtering, he 
was also called by the people Candagirika.
When the king was searching for a cruel person, [his messenger] came upon this man. The messenger said to him, “The king 
wishes to govern the people by means of killing. Can you do 
the job?” The man answered, “I could kill everybody in the whole 
of Jambudvipa, if I were asked to do so.” The messenger reported 
to the king what the man had said, and the king ordered that he 
be brought to his presence. By order of the king, the messenger 
went to the man’s place and told him, “The king has asked you to 
come.” The man said to the messenger, “Just wait a moment. I 
must go to see my parents.” Then he went to inform his parents 
that King As'oka wished to govern the people by means of killing, that he had asked him to do the job, and that he was willing 
i34a to go. But his parents would not permit him to go; and so in a fit 
of rage, he murdered his parents. Then he returned to the messenger, who asked him, “Why are you so late?” The man said in 
reply, “Because my parents would not allow me to go, I finished 
them off.”
When the man came to the palace, he told the king that if he 
wished to punish people, he should build a prison with a gate well 
decorated to look most magnificent, so that anybody who saw it 
would be delighted with it. He also asked the king to issue a strict 
order that nobody should be allowed to come out once he had 
entered the prison. The king said, “Very good.”
Candagirika then went to Kukkuta Monastery, where a bhiksu
was reciting a scripture in which the events in the hells were related, 
such as cauldrons with boiling water, furnaces with burning 
charcoal, mountains planted with knives, trees bearing swords, 
and other painful implements of punishment. Those who were 
bom in the hells were punished according to the sins they had
committed. Such hellish things were extensively related in the 
Scripture of the Five Divine Lictors. Upon hearing these words, 
Candagirika made all the implements of torture that were used in 
the hells.
In the country of Sravasti, there was a merchant who went to 
sea with his wife; a son was bom to them while they were at sea, 
and the child was thus named Sagara (Sea). After voyaging to and 
fro for twelve years, they encountered five hundred pirates, who 
killed the merchant and seized his property. His son alone escaped 
death. Later he became a Buddhist monk, and on his wanderings 
he reached the country of Pataliputra. One day he got up early, 
dressed himself properly, and went into the country with alms 
bowl in hand to collect food. As he did not know the place, he 
entered the prison to beg for alms, because he saw that its gate was 
so nicely decorated. Inside the prison he saw all kinds of implements of torture and intended to withdraw. But Candagirika got 
hold of him and said, “You shall suffer death and cannot go out.” 
Being frightened, the monk cried and wept with tears flowing 
down. Candagirika said to him, “Why are you crying like a child?” 
The monk replied, “It is not because I value my body, but because 
it is difficult to attain emancipation. It is difficult to renounce one’s 
home, but this I did. It is difficult to live during the time of 
Sakyamuni Buddha, but I am living in it. I have not gained the 
true Dharma of all Dharmas, and that is why I am anxious and 
worried.” Candagirika said to the monk, “I have been instructed by 
the great king that nobody should be allowed to leave this prison 
once he has come into it.” The monk said with tears, ‘You must 
allow me one month’s extension.” “Not one month, but seven days 
may be allowed,” was the reply. Considering that he was approaching his death, the monk zealously practiced the Dharma with great 
energy for the full seven days.
At that time, a prince had a talk with a palace maid, and King 
Asoka, being irritated by the sight, had the two of them sent to the 
prison for punishment. Candagirika put them in an iron mortar 
and pounded them with a pestle. Greatly terrified by the sight, the 
134b monk uttered the following stanza:
The Great Master, the Buddha compassionate,
The Leading Recluse, has rightly said that 
This material form is like a bubble,
Unsubstantial and not ever-abiding.
This fair and graceful body—
Where is it after its destruction?
Thus one should give up
What the ignorant take pleasure in.
I should realize that on this occasion.
I shall gain liberation in this prison.
With its aid I shall cross
The sea of the three realms of being.
In that one night the monk meditated with full energy and 
attained arhatship after cutting off his passions. Candagirika said 
to him, “The night is over and the day is dawning. You should know 
that the time of suffering is approaching.” The monk said in reply, 
I do not know what you mean by saying that the night is over and 
the day is dawning. But I do realize that the night of ignorance is 
over and the sun of wisdom is appearing. By the light of the sun of 
wisdom, I see that nothing has reality in this world. Thus I intend 
to edify the world with the Dharma of the Buddha.” He also told 
Candagirika, “Now you may do whatever you please with this body 
of mine.”
At that time, the warden of the prison, being a merciless man 
and having seen nothing of the world, relentlessly put the monk 
into an iron cauldron, poured pus, blood, feces, urine, and other 
filthy things into it, and built a big fire with much fuel to boil the 
monk in the cauldron. But when the fuel was exhausted, the body 
of the monk was not damaged at all. On seeing that the monk’s 
shape was not changed, the warden beat and scolded the jailors 
angrily, ‘W hy don’t you add more fuel to the fire?”
The warden then personally added fuel to the fire, but it 
would not burn. Meanwhile he saw that the monk was sitting 
cross-legged on a lotus flower in the cauldron. After seeing this 
phenomenon, the warden immediately went to report to the king.
Upon hearing this matter, the king, followed by his people, went 
to see it. At that moment the monk instantly came out of the iron 
cauldron by his supernatural powers and rose up into the air like 
a king goose hovering in the air in eighteen different ways.
King Asoka was delighted to see the monk as conspicuous as a 
mountain appearing in the air, and he uttered the following stanza:
Your body is similar to that of an ordinary man,
But your divine powers surpass the ability of men.
I do not know about this:
Who are you in fact?
You should tell me the truth 
And let me know you now.
If I know the truth,
I shall be a disciple of yours.
134c The monk then thought in his mind, “This king is now capable of 
accepting the Buddha’s words. He will build many stupas to enshrine the Buddha’s relics, so that all people can gain the benefit 
of the Dharma.” Having thought so, he wished to reveal the 
Buddha’s merits and uttered the following stanza:
The Buddha has cut off all passions;
His great compassion is incomparable.
I am a disciple
Of the best debater of the highest grade.
The inexhaustible power of the right Dharma 
Regards nothing as a real being.
The Buddha is a bull king among men 
Who can control himself and regulate others.
It is he who has liberated me
From the prison of the three realms of being.
[And he said,] “The king was also predicted by the Buddha, A 
hundred years after my nirvana, there will be a king by the name 
of Asoka in the city of Pataliputra. He will be a cakravartin king 
and rule over one of the four continents, and he will construct 
eighty-four thousand stupas for the enshrinement of my relics.
The prison to be built by the king, in which numerous people will 
be killed, will be like the hells. He will finally demolish it and 
impart freedom from fear to all living beings.’ The great king 
should now comply with the Buddha’s wishes.” He then uttered the 
following stanza:
Thus the great king of men
Should have a mind of pity
For all living beings
And grant them freedom from fear.
Complying with the wishes of the World-honored One,
He should erect numerous stupas for his relics.
King Asoka, fixing his mind on the Buddha and putting his hands 
palm to palm, uttered the following stanza in penitence:
I take refuge in the Buddha, the Dharma,
And his disciples in the Sangha (Buddhist Order).
May you, the son of the ten powers,
Treat me with patience.
All the evils that I have done 
I shall confess to you.
Now I shall cultivate my mind with diligence 
And with a mind of deep veneration.
I shall decorate this earth 
With many types of Buddha-stupas 
As white as snow and jade,
To conform with the Buddha’s augury.
The monk exclaimed in reply, “Excellent!” and then returned by 
supernatural powers to his own place.
When King Asoka was about to leave the prison, Candagirika 
said to him, with his hands joined palm to palm, “Your Majesty is 
aware that I have been instructed not to allow anybody to go out 
of this prison once he has entered it.” The king said to him, “Do you 
intend to kill me?” ‘Yes,” was the reply. The king asked him, 
“Which of us came in first?” Candagirika said in reply, “I came in 
i35a first.” Then the king told the jailors to arrest Candagirika, put him
in the lakuca (glue) house, and set it on fire. He also ordered people 
to demolish the prison so as to impart freedom from fear to all 
living beings.
With the intention of building numerous Buddha-stupas, the 
king arrayed his four divisions of troops and went to the Drona 
Stupa constructed by King Ajatasatru. Upon arriving at the stupa, 
he ordered his men to pull it down and take out the relics buried 
in it. In this way he took out the relics from seven stupas one after 
another. Then he went to a village named Ramagrama, where 
stood the first stupa ever built. He intended to break it also and 
take out the relics.
The Naga king then invited Asoka to the Naga palace and said 
to him, “This is the stupa to which I always make offerings. May 
Your Majesty preserve it.” King Asoka consented, and then the 
Naga king sent him back to Ramagrama. Considering that the 
Naga king protected that stupa with twice the usual attention 
because it was the first one ever built in the world, Asoka realized 
that he could not obtain the relics contained therein and returned 
to his own country.
King Asoka made eighty-four thousand precious cases and put 
the relics in all of them. He also made eighty-four thousand vases, 
banners, and canopies and gave them to the Yaksas (devils), 
ordering them to erect stupas at all places on earth and even over 
the great seas. He also announced that if any country in one of the 
three categories—the small, the medium, or the large ones—paid 
the sum of one crore of taels of gold, one royal stupa would be built 
there. Now as the country of Taksasila paid thirty-six crores of 
taels of gold, its people said to King Asoka, “May Your Majesty give 
us thirty-six cases.”
Upon hearing these words, the king wondered how, since he 
intended to build numerous stupas at all places, this country could 
be allowed to obtain so many cases of relics. Thus he said expediently to the people of that country, “Now I shall exempt you from 
thirty-five crores of taels of gold.” And he also declared, “From now 
onwards, all countries, whether they have more or fewer stupas, 
will not have to pay me any more gold.”
King As'oka then went to the great virtuous arhat Yasas, to 
whom he said, “I wish to complete the construction of all of the 
eighty-four thousand stupas in one moment in one day.” And he 
uttered the following stanza:
I took from the first seven stupas 
The relics of the World-honored One.
A king of the Maurya family am I,
Constructing stupas in one day,
Eighty-four thousand in number,
As brilliant as white clouds.
Having erected eighty-four thousand stupas, King As'oka supported and protected the Buddha-dharma, so much so that the 
people of the time called him Dharmasoka. All the people uttered 
the following stanza:
The great holy king of the Maurya family,
Knowing that the Dharma is of great benefit,
Dotted the world with many stupas 
And gave up his ill fame on earth.
Having gained the good name of a Dharma King,
By the Dharma he has achieved happiness.
End of Fascicle One
of the Biographical Scripture ofKingAsoka
The above was translated by Samghapala, a sramana (Buddhist 
monk) of Funan, on the twentieth day of the sixth month in the 
eleventh year of Tian-jian (512 C.E.) of the Liang dynasty at the 
Shou-guang Hall in Yang-du. See Baochang’s New Catalogue of
Chinese Buddhist Texts.
Chapter II
The Causes of Seeing Upagupta
When King Asoka had constructed eighty-four thousand relic 
stupas, he was very glad, and together with his ministers he went 
to Kukkuta Monastery. Upon arriving at the monastery, he went 
to the abbot to salute him with his hands joined palm to palm and 
said, “The Buddha, who was the All-seer, predicted that I would 
receive my present reward as a result of my offering a handful of 
sand to him. Was there any other person to whom the Buddha said 
anything in prediction?” The chief bhiksu of the time was named 
Yasas, who answered King Asoka in the affirmative. Before the 
World-honored One entered nirvana, there were a Naga king 
named Apalala and a potter as well as a candala (wicked) Naga 
king. After having converted them, the Buddha came to the country of Mathura. In Mathura he told the Elder Ananda, “A hundred 
years after the nirvana of the Tathagata, there will be in this 
country of Mathura a perfumer by the name of Gupta, who will 
have a son named Upagupta. Being a Buddha without the characteristic marks on his body, Upagupta will edify the people in a 
most excellent way and perform a Buddha’s functions after my 
nirvana.” He also said to Ananda, “Do you see yonder green 
forest?” Ananda replied, ‘Yes, I see it.” The Buddha said, “There 
is a mountain over there called Urumanda. A hundred years 
after the nirvana of the Tathagata, a monastery with the name 
Natabhatika will be built on the mountain; it will be the best place 
for meditation.” The World-honored One then uttered the following stanza:
Among all the learned disciples,
The best in wisdom,
As the World-honored One prophesied,
Is the one named Upagupta.
This great virtuous one in this world 
Will widely perform the Buddha’s functions.
i35c King Asoka inquired of the abbot Yasas, “Has Upagupta been born 
or not?” The great virtuous Yasas said in reply, “He has been born 
and is now on Urumanda Mountain. He is free from all passions, 
and various arhats are following him to gather up and save all 
suffering beings in the world. Thus he is preaching the Dharma, 
as the All-wise One, to Devas, human beings, and Asuras as well 
as Nagas and divine beings.”
At that time, the Elder Upagupta, surrounded by eighteen 
thousand arhats, was at Natabhatika Monastery. King Asoka 
uttered the following stanza to his ministers:
Quickly make arrangements to mobilize
My army of elephants, horses, chariots, and footmen.
I intend to go to that country 
Where stands the mountain Urumanda,
To see the Great Virtuous One 
With the name of Upagupta.
Through diligent cultivation to end his passions,
He has reached the stage of an arhat in perfection.
The ministers said to King Asoka, “Let Your Majesty just send a 
messenger to tell the people there to ask Upagupta to come to the 
king.” But the king said in reply, “He is an arhat. We should not 
despise or humiliate him but should go in person to salute him.” 
And he uttered the following stanza:
Living in the world like a Tathagata 
Is the one whose name is Upagupta.
If one receives not his commands,
His heart is made of adamant.
King Asoka then sent a messenger to Upagupta to inform him, “We 
wish to come to the Great Virtuous One.” Upon hearing this 
message, Upagupta thought, “If King Asoka comes here, he will
certainly bring with him a large retinue that would cause much 
loss to this country.” Then he said to the messenger, “I will go to 
him. There is no need for the king to come here.”
Thus the king built ships to welcome Upagupta and repaired 
all the roads leading to the country of Mathura. At that time, 
Upagupta and his eighteen thousand arhats embarked for 
Pataliputra with the intention of converting the king to the teachings of the Buddha.
A subject of King Asoka said to him, “It is for the sake of 
converting Your Majesty that Upagupta is coming to this country. 
It befits Your Majesty to know that the Buddha-dharma is comparable to a ship, by which you will be able, as you have cultivated 
goodness, to ferry across the sea of the three realms of existence 
and reach the other shore of non-action. Early tomorrow morning, 
Upagupta will walk to Your Majesty.”
Being delighted to hear these words, the king untied his string 
of pearls, worth a crore of taels of gold, and awarded it to the man. 
He also ordered the man to make an announcement with the 
beating of a drum, so that all people in Pataliputra might know 
136a that Upagupta was coming on the following day. The man was also 
instructed to utter the following stanza:
Those who wish to enjoy the bliss of riches,
Be born in the heavens, or achieve the causes of liberation, 
Should all go to see 
That person Upagupta.
One who did not see the Buddha—
The most honored one among bipedal beings,
Who was compassionate by intrinsic nature,
The great master free from passions—
Should go with offerings
To see the person named Upagupta.
King Asoka made all his people hear this stanza and also ordered 
them to mend and decorate the roads. He went out of the city to 
a distance of half a yojana, together with his subjects, holding 
flowers and playing various musical instruments, to welcome
Upagupta. On seeing that Upagupta had already come ashore at 
a distance, surrounded by eighteen thousand arhats standing in a 
group shaped like a crescent moon, King Asoka alighted from his 
elephant and walked to Upagupta. With one foot on board the ship 
and the other one on land, he carried Upagupta in his hands onto 
the ship, where he prostrated himself, with his knees, elbows, and 
head touching the floor, at the feet of the monk, like a big tree 
collapsing on the earth. After kissing the monk’s feet, he knelt 
before him, put his hands palm to palm, and gazed at him with 
admiration while he uttered the following stanza:
The earth has the sea as its garment
With mountains as canopies for its adornment.
Being rid of my foes I obtained this earth,
Which makes me feel delighted.
More am I delighted today 
To meet you, the Most Virtuous One.
As I see you today,
I feel doubly happy in my mind.
It is like seeing the World-honored One.
This is why I am happy in my mind.
Though the Buddha has entered nirvana,
You, the Most Virtuous One, are performing his functions.
In the darkness of the world,
You are the light of the sun and moon.
You adorn the world with wisdom,
As the Great Master has done.
The best person for the edification of men,
You are the shelter for all living beings.
May you give me instruction and 
I shall act according to your teachings.
Upagupta, the Most Virtuous One, stroked Asoka’s head with his 
right hand and uttered the following stanza:
Although Your Majesty is now free from obstacles,
You should still practice non-slackness.
It is rare to meet the Three Treasures,
To which offerings should always be made.
The World-honored One transmitted the Dharma-pitaka
To you, to me, and to others.
The Buddha-dharma you should constantly guard,
In order to convert all living beings.
King Asoka said in reply, “I have done what the World-honored 
One predicted.” And he also uttered the following stanza:
Offerings have I made to the relics
Of the World-honored One and to his statues.
Stupas have been built at all places,
Decorated with gems and jewels.
The only thing I cannot do is to renounce 
My home for the pure life of a recluse.
Upagupta said, “It is excellent, really excellent that Your Majesty 
has done such things, which are worthy of being done by a king. 
And why?”
Your Majesty should practice reality 
With your body, life, and property.
If you are reborn in another world,
You will not suffer pains in that world.
Offering a large amount of gifts to Upagupta, King Asoka brought 
him to the city and carried the Most Virtuous One to a high seat. 
Upagupta’s body was as soft and smooth as cotton; and the king, 
having touched his body, uttered the following stanza with his 
hands joined palm to palm:
Your body is soft and smooth,
Like silk and cotton.
My rough and coarse body 
Has touched Your Reverence.
Upagupta then uttered the following stanza:
I have offered the best gift
To the Buddha, the World-honored One.
It was unlike the sand
You presented to the Tathagata.
King Asoka again uttered the following stanza:
I had the mind of a child,
To offer sand to the World-honored One 
Who was the field of blessedness.
Thus I have become a king.
In order to please Asoka, Upagupta uttered the following stanza:
Your Majesty met the field of blessedness 
In which grew the seeds of giving alms.
Hence you gained the reward 
Of wonderful happiness.
Having heard this stanza, the king felt greatly pleased and uttered 
the following stanza:
Formerly I offered sand to the World-honored One,
The field of great blessedness.
Now I have gained incomparable happiness,
Being a quarter of a cakravartin king
Who, upon hearing of this event,
Will not make offerings to the Tathagata?
i36c At that time, King Asoka worshipped at Upagupta’s feet and said, 
“Most Virtuous One, I wish to make offerings to all the places 
where the Buddha walked, stood, sat, or lay. I also wish to mark 
the places to let the people of the future know where the Buddha, 
the Tathagata, walked, stood, sat, or lay, so that they may be 
converted to the teachings of the Buddha.” Then he uttered the 
following stanza:
I intend to make offerings
To all places where the Tathagata
Walked, stood, sat, or lay,
So that I may be free from the pains of rebirth.
I also wish to make images of the Tathagata
Walking, standing, sitting, or lying,
To provide people of the future 
With a chance of seeing the Buddha.
Upagupta said in reply, “It is excellent, Your Majesty, really excellent! This intention of yours is most difficult to realize. Now I shall 
show you the places of the four postures of the Tathagata, the 
World-honored One, so that you can make images for the purpose 
of converting all living beings.”
At that time, King Asoka arrayed his four divisions of troops, 
holding flowers and playing music, and went with Upagupta to 
those places. Upagupta took King Asoka to the Buddha’s birthplace in the wood of Lumbini, and said with his right hand pointing 
to the place, “King Asoka, this is the Buddha’s birthplace.” And 
then he uttered the following stanza:
This is the first place of the World-honored One,
Where he walked seven steps after he was born.
With pure eyes he observed the four quarters 
And made a Lion’s Roar, saying,
“This is my last birth 
From a mother’s womb.”
King Asoka prostrated himself on the ground to worship the place 
where the Tathagata was born and uttered the following stanza 
with his hands joined palm to palm:
One who has seen the Buddha 
Possesses great merits.
If one has heard the Lion’s Roar,
He gains the same merits.
In order to engender a mind of deep faith in King Asoka, Upagupta 
asked him, “Do you wish to see a heavenly being who saw the 
Buddha walking seven steps after he was born and heard the 
Lion’s Roar?” The king said in reply, “Most Virtuous One, I do wish 
to see him.” Upagupta said, “The heavenly being is residing on the 
branch that Mahamaya was holding when the Tathagata was
bom.” Then he pointed to the place and uttered the following 
stanza:
If there is any heavenly being 
Residing in this wood,
Who has seen the World-honored One 
And heard his Lion’s Roar,
May he appear in person 
To engender Asoka’s conviction.
137a The heavenly being then appeared in person and stood with hands 
joined palm to palm before Upagupta, to whom he said, “Most 
Virtuous One, what do you wish me to do?”
Upagupta said to King Asoka, “This heavenly being saw the 
Buddha at the time of his birth.” With his hands joined palm to palm, 
King Asoka uttered the following stanza to the heavenly being:
You saw the Buddha when he was born 
With a dignified body of a hundred blisses.
His features resembled a lotus flower,
Loved and admired by the whole world.
You also heard the Lion’s Roar 
Right in this great wood.
The heavenly being uttered the following stanza in reply:
I have seen the Buddha’s body,
Brilliant with golden hues,
Walking seven steps in air,
The supreme one among all bipeds.
The Lion’s Roar I also heard,
Honored by heavenly beings and mankind.
The king inquired, ‘What were the auspicious signs when the 
Tathagata was born?” The heavenly being answered, “It is not 
possible for me to relate all the wonderful things in full. I can tell 
only a few things briefly.” Then he uttered the following stanza:
Emitting a light of golden color,
Shining upon this blind world,
He was adored by men and beings in heavens,
And the earth quaked with the sea and mountains.
King Asoka offered a hundred thousand taels of gold to the birthplace of the Tathagata, where he constructed a stupa. Then he 
went to the other places.
Upagupta took King Asoka to the abode of a recluse in
Kapilavastu and pointed to the place to show the king. It was at
this place that the Bodhisattva, as an infant with a lovely body
well adorned with the thirty-two physical marks, was shown to /
King Suklodana. On seeing that place, King Asoka prostrated
himself on the ground to worship it. Sakyavardhana was a place
of divine beings. When the Bodhisattva went there to pay homage
to the divine beings, they declined to accept his worship but
/
saluted him. When King Suklodana witnessed this event, he remarked, “This son of mine is the Deva of Devas.” Thus he was 
called Devatideva.
Upagupta said again, “This is the place where the Brahman 
physiognomist read the features of the Bodhisattva.” He also said, 
“This is the place where a recluse predicted the Bodhisattva’s 
future, saying that the child would become a Buddha.” He also 
said, “This is the place where Mahaprajapatl fostered the Bodhisattva.” He also said, “This is the place where the Bodhisattva 
studied books.” He also said, “This is the place where the Bodhisattva learned the arts of riding an elephant, a chariot, and a 
horse.” He also said, “This is the place where the Bodhisattva 
fully mastered different arts and crafts.” He also said, “This 
137b is the place where the Bodhisattva turned the Wheel of the 
Dharma.” He also said, “This is the place where he amused himself with sixty thousand maids of honor.” He also said, “This 
is the place where the Bodhisattva felt sorry at the sight of an 
aged man, a sick person, and a corpse.” He also said, “This is 
the place where the Bodhisattva practiced meditation and other 
methods for getting rid of desire and evils under a jambu tree. 
Here he gained enlightenment and insight and entered the 
first stage of dhyana (trance), in which he was freed from rebirth
and enjoyed bliss. While the Bodhisattva was sitting in meditation the sun passed the meridian, but the shadow of the tree 
under which he was sitting did not move, whereas the shadows
of other trees shifted as the sun moved. At this sight, King /
Suklodana prostrated himself on the ground to worship at 
the Bodhisattva’s feet. Ten thousand heavenly beings of that 
place attended the Bodhisattva and followed him going out of 
the city of Kapilavastu at midnight.” Again, there was the place 
where the Bodhisattva took off his precious crown and sent his 
horse and the groom Chandaka back home. The following stanza 
was uttered:
His precious crown and pearls were forsaken,
Together with his horse and Chandaka,
Whom he sent back to his homeland.
Proceeding alone without a guard,
To cultivate himself with effort,
He entered the mountains to learn the Way.
At this place the Bodhisattva gave his silk garment to a hunter in 
exchange for his robe and became a homeless recluse.
This was the place where Bhargava invited the Bodhisattva. 
This was the place where King Bimbisara offered half of his 
kingdom to the Bodhisattva. This was the place where he studied 
under Udraka Ramaputra. The following stanza was then 
uttered:
At this place there was a recluse,
Whose name was Udraka Ramaputra.
Going away after hearing his dharma,
The King of Men had no more teachers.
At this place he practiced asceticism for six years. The following 
stanza was also uttered:
For six years of ascetic life,
I did what was hard to do.
Knowing that austerity was not the Way,
I gave up the recluse’s practice.
This was the place where the Bodhisattva accepted the mill? 
congee prepared with milk collected from sixteen cows and offered 
by the two maids Nanda and Nandabala. The following stanza was 
uttered:
It was at this place that the Bodhisattva 
Took Nanda’s offering of milk congee.
The Great Hero, whose words were supreme,
From here went to the Bodhi tree.
At this place the Naga king Kalika eulogized the Bodhisattva, as 
was stated in the following stanza:
The Naga king named Kalika 
Said in commendation:
“By this way he will go 
To the Bodhi tree.”
At that time, King Asoka worshipped at the feet of Upagupta and, 
with his hands joined palm to palm, said to him, “I wish to see the 
i37c Naga king who has formerly seen the Tathagata walking like an 
elephant king, going by this way to the Bodhi tree.” Upagupta then 
went to the abode of Kalika and uttered the following stanza while 
he pointed at the Naga king:
The most eminent of all Naga kings,
May you appear in your true form,
As you saw the Bodhisattva 
Going from here to the Bodhi tree.
Then the Naga king Kalika appeared in his physical form, stood 
before Upagupta with his hands joined palm to palm, and said, 
“Most Virtuous One, what do you wish me to do?” Upagupta said 
to King Asoka, “This is the Naga king Kalika, who praised the 
Bodhisattva when he was going by this way to the Bodhi tree.” 
King Asoka put his hands palm to palm and uttered the following 
stanza to the Naga king Kalika:
You have seen the Buddha, the World-honored One,
Whose light was of a golden hue.
None was comparable to him in this world.
His face was like the full moon in autumn.
Of the great merits of his ten powers 
Please say just one portion.
How did he go from here,
The Buddha who possessed divine powers?
The Naga king Kalika said in reply, “It is impossible for me to 
relate all this in full, but I will tell you briefly. May Your Majesty 
listen to me.” Then he uttered the following stanza:
When the Bodhisattva walked on the earth,
It quaked in six ways.
The great sea and mountains 
Issued a light brighter than the sun.
After having constructed a stupa at the place of the Naga king, 
King Asoka went away to other places.
Upagupta then took King Asoka to the Bodhi tree and pointed 
to it, saying, ‘Your Majesty, this is the place where the Bodhisattva, accompanied by compassion, conquered the army of Mara 
and attained the supreme perfect enlightenment.” He also uttered 
the following stanza:
It was here that the Lord of Full Completion 
Vanquished the army of the King of Destruction,
Tasted the ghee without compare, and attained 
The supreme enlightenment of perfection.
King Asoka offered a hundred thousand taels of gold to the Bodhi 
tree, and, after constructing a stupa at the spot, went away to 
other places.
Upagupta again spoke to the king, saying, “This is the place 
where the Buddha received from the Four Heavenly Kings four 
alms bowls, which he merged into one.” He said at another place, 
“This is the place where the Buddha accepted food offered by the 
two merchants Trapusa and Bhallika. From here the Buddha went 
to the country of Varanasi.” There was also the place where the 
heretic named Upajeta praised the Tathagata.
Upagupta also took King Asoka to Mrgadava, the park of 
recluses, and pointed to it, saying, “This is the place where the 
World-honored One turned thrice the Wheel of the Dharma of the 
twelve nidanas (links of causality).” And he also uttered the following stanza:
At this place he turned three times
The Wheel of the Dharma of the twelve nidanas,
Created by the Dharma of truth,
To save all beings from the pains of rebirth.
This was the place where one thousand heretics became Buddhist 
monks.
There was another place where the Buddha preached the 
Dharma to King Bimbisara, who thereupon realized correct views. 
At another place the Buddha preached the Dharma to eighty 
thousand heavenly beings and numerous Brahmans and householders of the country of Magadha, who thereupon realized correct 
views. There was another place where the Buddha preached the 
Dharma to the heavenly king Sakra together with eighty thousand 
heavenly beings, who thereupon realized correct views. There was 
another place where the World-honored One returned to earth 
with numerous heavenly beings after having preached the Dharma 
to his mother and spent the summer retreat at her abode in 
heaven. There were many more places, as has been extensively 
recorded.
Upagupta then took King Asoka to Kusinagara, where the 
Buddha entered nirvana. He raised his hand to show the king, 
saying, “Your Majesty, this is the place where the Tathagata 
entered complete nirvana after having done what ought to be 
done.” And he also uttered the following stanza:
Heavenly beings and Asuras,
Yaksas, Nagas, and other deities,
And all beings in the world 
Having been fully edified,
The great zealous one of compassion 
Entered nirvana, the state of completion.
Upagupta also took King Asoka to Mrgadava, the park of 
recluses, and pointed to it, saying, “This is the place where the 
World-honored One turned thrice the Wheel of the Dharma of the 
twelve nidanas (links of causality).” And he also uttered the following stanza:
At this place he turned three times
The Wheel of the Dharma of the twelve nidanas,
Created by the Dharma of truth,
To save all beings from the pains of rebirth.
This was the place where one thousand heretics became Buddhist 
monks.
There was another place where the Buddha preached the 
Dharma to King Bimbisara, who thereupon realized correct views. 
At another place the Buddha preached the Dharma to eighty 
thousand heavenly beings and numerous Brahmans and householders of the country of Magadha, who thereupon realized correct 
views. There was another place where the Buddha preached the 
Dharma to the heavenly king Sakra together with eighty thousand 
heavenly beings, who thereupon realized correct views. There was 
another place where the World-honored One returned to earth 
with numerous heavenly beings after having preached the Dharma 
to his mother and spent the summer retreat at her abode in 
heaven. There were many more places, as has been extensively 
recorded.
Upagupta then took King Asoka to Kusinagara, where the 
Buddha entered nirvana. He raised his hand to show the king, 
saying, “Your Majesty, this is the place where the Tathagata 
entered complete nirvana after having done what ought to be 
done.” And he also uttered the following stanza:
Heavenly beings and Asuras,
Yaksas, Nagas, and other deities,
And all beings in the world 
Having been fully edified,
The great zealous one of compassion 
Entered nirvana, the state of completion.
which you should make offerings.” The king inquired what the 
merits and divine powers of this person were. The elder monk said 
in reply, “The Buddha said that he was the foremost in possessing 
supernatural powers among all his disciples. He could agitate with 
his toe the supreme Dharma hall of the heavenly king Sakra, and 
he could subdue the Naga kings Nanda and Upananda.” Then he 
uttered the following stanza:
In divine powers Maudgalyayana 
Was the foremost, as the Buddha said.
He could shake with his toe
/
The supreme hall of Sakra.
Two Naga kings he subdued,
Nanda and Upananda.
His merits and divine powers 
Were a sea that was fathomless.
Ring Asoka offered a hundred thousand taels of gold to the stupa 
of Maudgalyayana and uttered the following stanza with his hands 
joined palm to palm:
Supreme divine powers
Save one from the distress of rebirth.
I am worshipping now
The renowned Maudgalyayana.
Upagupta pointed to another place and said, “This is the stupa of 
Mahakasyapa, to which offerings should be made.” King Asoka 
inquired about the merits of this person, and the elder said in 
reply, “The Buddha said that he was the foremost in contentment 
with few desires and in the practice of eight kinds of asceticism. 
The Buddha once shared his seat with him and covered him with 
the Buddha’s own robe. He converted suffering beings and upheld the Dharma-pitaka.” [Upagupta] also uttered the following 
stanza:
The supreme field of great blessedness 
Practiced contentment with few desires 
And upheld the Buddha’s Dh&rma-pitaka
To save all suffering beings.
The Buddha shared his seat with him 
And covered him with his robes.
Nobody could relate in full 
The great sea of his merits.
King Asoka again offered a hundred thousand taels of gold to the 
stupa of Mahakasyapa and uttered the following stanza with his 
hands joined palm to palm:
He always stayed in caves,
In contentment, with few desires,
Free from distress and enmity,
Having gained the fruit of liberation.
For his power of peerless merits,
I pay him homage.
Upagupta then showed King Asoka the stupa of Vakula and said, 
“Your Majesty, this is the stupa of Vakula, to which you should 
make offerings.” King Asoka inquired, “What were the merits of 
this person?” Upagupta replied, “Among the Buddha’s disciples, he 
was foremost in keeping himself free from illness, but he never 
taught the Dharma to others even in one or two sentences.” Then 
the king ordered his men to offer twenty cowries to the stupa. A 
minister asked King Asoka, “Vakula was also an arhat like the 
others. Why did you offer only twenty cowries to his stupa, whereas you offered gold to the other stupas?” King Asoka said, ‘You 
should listen to me.”
The lamp of wisdom 
Can dispel darkness.
Caring about one’s own corporality 
Does little benefit to the world.
Thus cowries I present 
As an offering to this stupa.
At that moment, the twenty cowries moved from the stupa to 
the feet of King As'oka. The minister was greatly surprised at 
the sight, and he said, “As this arhat had the mental power to
live with few desires, he refused to accept alms even after his 
nirvana.”
Upagupta then took Ring Asoka to the stupa of Ananda and 
said, ‘Tour Majesty, this is the stupa of Ananda, to which offerings 
should be made. He was the attendant disciple of the Tathagata 
and could remember the Buddha’s sayings. The Buddha said that 
among his disciples Ananda was the foremost in hearing his 
sayings.” Then he uttered the following stanza:
This elder Ananda,
Honored by men and heavenly beings,
Always keeping the Buddha’s bowl,
Possessed the mind of intelligence.
He heard as much as the great sea;
What he spoke were words of subtlety.
Understanding the Buddha’s meanings,
Comprehending all the Dharma,
Being the storehouse of merits,
He was praised by the World-honored Buddha.
King Asoka offered one crore of taels of gold to the stupa of 
Ananda, and his minister asked him, “Why did you present the 
largest offering to this stupa?” Ring Asoka replied, “Listen to me.”
The Dharmakaya (Body of Truth) of the World-honored 
Buddha
Is pure without parallel.
This he could accept and uphold.
Thus I offer the best gift to him.
He lit the lamp of the Buddha’s teaching 
To dispel the darkness of distress.
By his power the Dharma is abiding;
Thus I offer the best gift to him.
As the water in an ox track 
Is not comparable to the great sea,
The water of the wisdom of Ananda
Is not comparable to the sea of the Buddha’s wisdom.
In the Sutras the Buddha ascended the throne
Together with him.
That is why I offer the best gift to him today.
After having made the offerings, King As'oka was greatly pleased. 
He worshipped at Upagupta’s feet and uttered the following stanza:
In my present human life,
I did not lose the fruit of a good deed.
It is by the power of my previous merits 
That I have become a king of sovereignty.
Through what was falsity,
I gained the Dharma of reality.
Relic-stupas of the World-honored One 
Adorn this mundane world.
But in the practice of austerity 
Nothing have I yet done.
After worshipping at Upagupta’s feet, King As'oka returned to his 
own country.
------------------------------------------------------
Chapter III
139b
The Causes of Making Offerings
to the Bodhi Tree
King Asoka offered a hundred thousand taels of gold each to the 
place where the Buddha was born, the place where he attained 
enlightenment, the place where he turned the Wheel of the Dharma, 
and the place where he entered nirvana. In the Bodhi tree, however, he felt the most faith and joy, and he pondered that as this 
was the place where the World-honored One had attained supreme 
perfect enlightenment he should offer the best gems and jewels to 
the tree every day.
King Asoka’s first lady, Tisyaraksita by name, was angry 
about it. “If the great king loves me, why should he give all 
the best gems and jewels to the Bodhi tree?” She called in a 
candali (outcaste) maid and said to her, “The Bodhi tree is what 
I hate. Can you destroy it for me?” The maid said in reply, 
“Yes, I can, but you must pay me in gold.” The lady said, “Let it be 
so.”
The candali maid cursed the tree with incantations and bound 
it with a cord, and so the tree withered away gradually. Someone 
reported it to the king, saying, “The Bodhi tree is dying away 
gradually.” And he uttered the following stanza:
Under the Bodhi tree the Buddha sat,
Becoming omniscient in the world 
And gaining the wisdom of all knowledge.
But the tree is now dying.
Upon hearing these words, the king fainted and fell to the ground. 
He recovered himself after his ministers sprinkled water on him
for a long while. Sobbing and shedding tears, he uttered the 
following stanza:
When I see this king of trees,
It is like seeing the Tathagata.
If it withers away,
My life will also expire.
On seeing that the king was so anxious and worried, the lady said 
to him, “If I cannot revive the Bodhi tree, then I also cannot please 
Your Majesty.” The king said in reply, “If you can revive the Bodhi 
tree, then you are not a woman. Why? Because this is the place 
where the Buddha attained supreme perfect enlightenment.”
The lady called the candali maid and said to her, “Can you 
restore the tree to grow as before?” The maid replied, “If the root 
of the Bodhi tree is not dead, I can rejuvenate the tree to grow 
again.” Then the candali maid unloosed the cord with which she 
had bound the tree and dug a ditch around it. Every day she 
poured milk into the ditch to irrigate the tree, and in a few days it 
gradually revived and became alive as it was before. The people 
reported it to the king, saying, ‘Your Majesty has done a great 
meritorious deed. The Bodhi tree is growing again.” Upon hearing 
these words, the king was very happy, and he went to the Bodhi 
tree and gazed at it without blinking. Then he uttered the following stanza:
Beginning from King Bimbisara,
To the kings of different times,
None of them could perform 
These two supreme causes:
To water this tree of enlightenment 
With milk of good color and fragrance.
I also present gifts
To the holy monks of the five sects.
King Asoka filled a thousand golden, silver, and lapis lazuli bottles 
with scented water and carried different kinds of food, drink, and 
flowers to bathe the tree with the scented water contained in the
thousand bottles. He also draped the tree with silk draperies of 
different colors. At that time the king also observed the Eight 
Precepts. After receiving the Eight Precepts, he ascended the 
audience hall with a thurible in his hand and invited the monks of 
the four quarters, saying, “May all the disciples of the Worldhonored One in the four quarters come here to take me in to 
i 39c the teachings of the Buddha!” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
The sons of the Sugata of right conduct,
Whose sense organs are pure and free from desires,
Worthy of worship and great fields of blessedness,
Are refuges for men and Devas.
The supreme sons of the Sugata
Are free from desires and practice dhyana]
Upon them the Asuras rely;
May they come to take me in.
In the country of Kasmlra,
In the great and secluded woods,
There live many arhats;
May they come to take me in.
The sons of the Tathagata rejoicing in dhyana
Live at Lake Anavatapta,
Beside rivers, and in caves on the hills;
May they come with pity for me.
The sons of the Tathagata with good words 
Live in the halls of sariras (relics)
With minds of compassion free from worries;
May they come to take me in.
Possessing divine powers of great bravery,
Living on Mount Gandhamadana,
Are the arhats I invite;
May they all come to this site.
When King Asoka had uttered this stanza, three hundred thousand bhiksus, of whom a hundred thousand were harmonious 
arhats and two hundred thousand were learners, and numerous
zealous ordinary people, gathered together, but nobody among 
the Sangha took the chief seat. King Asoka said to the Elder 
Yasas, who possessed the six supernatural powers, “Why is it 
that nobody is sitting on the first seat?” The Elder replied, 
“Because it is the seat for the chief Elder.” The king said again, 
“Is there anybody even higher than Your Reverence?” The Elder 
replied, ‘Yes. The Buddha said that among his disciples the 
foremost in preaching, like the roar of a lion, was the person 
surnamed Bharadvaja and named Pindola. The chief seat is for 
him.”
Upon hearing these words, King Asoka was so excited that his 
hair stood on end like kadamba flowers. He said, “Most Virtuous 
One, is there any bhiksu who saw the Buddha before he entered 
nirvana and is still living now?” The Elder replied, Yes, the 
person who is surnamed Bharadvaja and named Pindola saw the 
Buddha.” The king then inquired, “But can I see him today?” The 
Elder said in reply, You will see him in a moment; he is coming 
now.” The king was greatly pleased to hear these words and 
uttered the following stanza:
A great benefit I shall gain,
And I shall be converted in a peerless way
By seeing one of great virtue;
Pindola is his name.
King Asoka put his hands palm to palm and looked at the air 
140a without moving his eyes for a moment. Then Pindola, followed by 
innumerable arhats surrounding him in a group shaped like a 
crescent moon, descended from the air like a king goose and sat on 
the first seat.
At that time, King Asoka saw the arrival of Pindola Bharadvaja; and all the bhiksus from the ten quarters stood up from 
their seats. He saw that Pindola had silvery hair and that the 
skin of his forehead as well as his eyebrows were hanging 
down over his face in the manner of a pratyekabuddha. Upon 
seeing him the king prostrated himself, like a big tree falling to 
the ground, to worship Pindola. He kissed the monk’s feet,
knelt before him with his hands joined palm to palm, and 
looked at him shedding tears, while he uttered the following 
stanza:
The earth has the sea as its garment,
With mountains as canopies for its adornment.
Having done away with my foes,
I, Asoka, owned this earth,
Which made me delighted with pleasure.
Even more am I delighted today,
To meet you, a great virtuous man.
As I see you today,
I feel doubly happy in my mind.
He also asked, “Did you, Reverend Sir, ever see the World-honored 
One?”
Pindola parted his long eyebrows with both hands to look at 
King Asoka and uttered the following stanza:
I saw the Tathagata several times,
The peerless and unparalleled one 
Who possessed the thirty-two marks,
Whose face was like the autumnal full moon,
Whose pure voice dissolved affliction,
Entering the samadhi of non-disputation.
King Asoka inquired again, “Where and how did Your Reverence 
see the Buddha?” The Elder said in reply, ‘Your Majesty, the 
World-honored One stayed at first in the city of Rajagrha with a 
following of five hundred passion-free arhats. As I was among the 
group, I had the opportunity to see him.” Then he uttered the 
following stanza:
The passion-free Mahamuni 
Was followed by passion-free arhats.
When they were staying there,
I could see him by good chance.
Just as you see me today,
I saw the Buddha in the same way.
“Again, Your Majesty, the World-honored One, in order to subdue 
the heretics, once manifested in the country of Sravasti various 
supernatural powers and appeared as numerous metamorphosed 
Buddhas with dignified physical marks and signs, ascending one 
heaven after another up to the Akanistha heaven. I was also 
present on that occasion and witnessed the different divine transformations of the Buddha.” Then he uttered the following stanza:
There were many heretics,
Practicing different erroneous ways.
The World-honored One subdued them 
With his supernormal powers.
I saw the Buddha at that time,
Giving the world happiness.
“Again, Your Majesty, after staying for the summer retreat in the 
Thirty-three heavens to preach the Dharma to his mother, the 
World-honored One, surrounded by heavenly beings, descended to 
the country of Samkasya. As I was then among the congregation, 
I saw the heavenly beings, and I saw the bhiksunl named 
Utpalavarnika transforming herself into the form of a cakravartin
king possessing all of the seven kinds of treasures.” He then 
uttered the following stanza:
After his rainy season retreat in Heaven,
The Buddha descended from there.
As I was among the congregation,
I had the chance to see the Buddha.
“Again, Your Majesty, once Sumagadha, daughter of Anathapindada, invited the Buddha and five hundred arhats. The Buddha 
went by his divine power to the country of Pundravardhana, while 
I, carrying a mountain, also went through the air to the country 
by divine power. On that occasion the Tathagata instructed me, 
saying, You must not enter nirvana so long as my Dharma abides 
in the world.’ ” Pindola then uttered the following stanza:
At the invitation of Sumagadha,
The Buddha went there by divine power.
I followed him to the land of Pundra,
Raising a mountain high by my own power.
The Buddha instructed me on that occasion 
To live in the world so long as the Dharma abides.
That was the condition upon which 
I was able to see the Buddha.
“Again, Your Majesty, when you were a child in a previous life, you 
offered sand with a childish mind to the Buddha, while I offered him 
cooked rice, when he entered the city of Rajagrha to collect alms. 
Radhagupta rejoiced at the event. The Buddha made a prediction, 
saying, ‘A hundred years after my nirvana, this child will become a 
cakravartin king with the name of Asoka, rule over one of the four 
continents, and be a Dharma King. He will construct eighty-four 
thousand Dharmaraja stupas for the enshrinement of relics.’ I was 
then among the congregation.” He then uttered the following stanza:
The king was then a child,
When with folded hands he offered sand.
I was there at that moment 
And witnessed the event.
King Asoka again inquired of Pindola, “Where does Your Reverence 
live?” He replied with the following stanza:
North of Lake Anavatapta,
On the mountain Gandhamadana:
I live at that place 
With my fellow monks.
King Asoka again asked Pindola, “How many people follow Your 
Reverence?” He replied with the following stanza:
Sixty thousand arhats 
Follow and surround me.
I and my congregation
Are free from the bane of passion.
“Again, Your Majesty, why are you so inquisitive about these 
matters? You should now quickly offer food to the monks. When the
monks have taken their meal, I will talk with you again.” The king 
said in reply, “Yes, I shall do as you advise. In order to remember 
the Buddha, I should go to see the Bodhi tree. After seeing the 
Bodhi tree, I shall offer a meal of different kinds of food and drink 
to the monks.”
King Asoka said to a bhiksu named Sarvamitra, “I am going to 
offer a hundred thousand taels of gold and a thousand golden, 
silver, and lapis lazuli water pots to the monks. Make an announcement in the assembly in my name that this offering is made 
to the monks of the five sects.”
At that time King Asoka’s son Kunala was by the right side of 
the king. As the prince was in fear of his father, he dared not speak 
but raised two fingers to show to the announcer bhiksu that he 
would offer twice as many gifts as his father. Upon seeing that 
Kunala was going to present twice as many gifts as his father, the 
whole assembly laughed merrily. When the king saw that the 
assembly was laughing, he said to his minister Radhagupta, ‘You 
must have made some mistake that caused the people to laugh.” 
Radhagupta said in reply, “As more people are wishing to perform 
meritorious deeds, if Your Majesty wishes to do the same, it befits 
Your Majesty to offer twice as many gifts as were intended.” King 
Asoka said in reply, “I shall offer three hundred thousand taels 
of gold to the monks and fill three thousand precious water pots 
with scented water to irrigate the Bodhi tree. Make an announcement in my name that the gifts are offered to the monks of the five 
sects.”
Kunala then raised four fingers to show to the bhiksus. Greatly 
enraged, the king said to the minister Radhagupta, “Now I am 
performing meritorious deeds. Who is so ignorant of worldly decorum as to compete with me?” On seeing that the king was getting 
angry, Radhagupta saluted him at his feet and told him who dared 
to compete with him in the performance of meritorious deeds by 
uttering the following stanza:
Who dares to compete with the king
In the act of merit making?
It is no one else but Kunala
Who is competing with the monarch.
When Asoka turned to his right he saw Prince Kunala and said to 
Pindola, “Most Virtuous One, with the exception of my treasure 
house in which are stored the seven kinds of precious things, I offer 
everything, including all my land, palace attendants, ministers, as 
well as myself and Kunala, to the Sangha. Make an announcement 
in my name to the assembly that I offer everything to the monks 
of the five sects.” And he also uttered the following stanza:
Everything in my palace,
Excepting my treasures,
But including attendants and courtiers,
I offer to the monks.
The monks of the congregation 
Are fields of blessing.
I and my prince 
Shall gain merits.
i 4ia After having presented alms to Pindola and all the monks in the 
assembly, King Asoka constructed a wall around the Bodhi tree. 
He personally climbed up to the top of the wall and poured four 
thousand water pots of scented water to irrigate the tree, which 
started to grow as before. And he uttered the following stanza:
I shall irrigate the Bodhi tree,
Which is now growing again,
With rich boughs and foliage,
And more merits shall I gain.
Having been watered by the king, the Bodhi tree started to grow 
as before, with green and pliant branches and leaves, and it 
unfolded new buds, to the great delight of the king and his ministers and people. Food and drink were then offered to the monks.
In the assembly there was a monk of great virtue by the name 
of Yasas, who said to the king, “This assembly of monks is truly to 
be adored and respected. You should make offerings to it without 
a mind of discrimination.” King Asoka served food to the monks
with his own hands, from the highest in order to the last one. At 
the end of the order there were two novices who made joy buns out 
of cooked rice and threw them to each other for fun. King Asoka 
was amused to see them and thought that the two novices were 
playing like children.
The king went again to serve the chief monk with food and 
gradually came to the presence of Yasas, who said to him, ‘Your 
Majesty should not harbor any feeling of disbelief towards any 
monk in the assembly.” The king consented, but he told the Elder 
Yasas that two novices were having fun with cooked rice. Yasas 
said in reply, “Those two novices are arhats, having gained freedom of mind and wisdom.” The king was greatly delighted to hear 
this.
Then he thought in his mind, “Now that I have offered food to 
the monks, I should get some good robes to offer to the two 
novices.” Having read the mind of the king, one of the novices 
produced by his power of merits an iron vessel and placed it before 
him, while the other one produced gandha-jala (fragrant water) 
and other things. When the king saw these things, he asked, 
“What is the use of these things?” They replied, “Since Your 
Majesty wishes to present us with separate gifts of robes after 
offering food to the monks, we intend to dye the new robes.” Upon 
hearing these words, the king thought in his mind, “I was just 
thinking within my mind and did not say anything. How did these 
persons come to know my mind?” Then he prostrated himself on 
the ground to worship at the feet of the two novices and uttered 
the following stanza to them:
I, king of the Maurya clan,
And my courtiers and men 
Have done deeds of merit 
And gained great benefits.
I have faith in zealousness
And have given what I can in alms.
i4ib King Asoka said to the two novices, “On your account, I shall offer 
three robes to each of the monks in the assembly.” So, after having
performed meritorious deeds for the monks of the five sects, King 
Asoka also presented three robes to each of them, besides offering 
four hundred thousand taels of gold to them. He also paid a large 
amount of gold and silver to redeem his land, palace attendants, 
and ministers, as well as himself and Kunala.
The Causes of Vitasoka
King Asoka had a mind of deep faith in the Buddha-dharma. After 
constructing eighty-four thousand stupas, he convened an assembly of monks of the five sects, to whom he offered food and drink. 
There were in the assembly three hundred thousand arhats, twice 
as many learners, and innumerable zealous ordinary people, in 
whom the king had double faith.
At that time, King Asoka’s younger brother, Vitasoka, believed 
in the dharma of the heretics, and he said, “None of Sakyamuni’s 
disciples has attained emancipation. Why? Because they always 
take delight in a pleasurable way of life and dread asceticism.” 
King Asoka said to his younger brother, “Do not fix your faith in 
the wrong place. You should believe in the Buddha-dharma.”
At another time when King Asoka went out hunting, his 
younger brother saw a hermit in the mountains who was scorching 
himself with heat from five directions while earnestly practicing 
asceticism. Vitasoka went up to worship at his feet and said, “Most 
Virtuous One, how long have you been staying here?” The hermit 
said in reply, “Twelve years.” The prince asked again, “What food 
do you eat?” The hermit answered, “I often eat the fruits and roots 
of trees.” The prince again inquired, “What clothes do you wear?” 
The hermit replied, “I weave cogon grass to make myself a robe.” 
“What about your bedding?” asked the prince. “I spread grass on 
the ground,” answered the hermit. The prince asked again, “What 
makes you feel so distressed?” The hermit replied, “When I saw 
two deer mating, the sight aroused my lustful desire; and the fire 
of lustful desire is burning in my heart.” Then Vitasoka entertained a doubt in his mind and reflected, “Even this ascetic ha
lustful desire, so how could the disciples of the Buddha, always 
living a pleasurable life, be free from passion if they saw the same 
sight? If they have desire in their minds, how could they cherish 
the notion of detesting and forsaking desire?” And he uttered the 
following stanza:
The hermit in the wood of mortification,
Living upon fruits, roots, and flowers,
Breathing air without taking foul nutrition,
Cannot quell his carnal desire.
Sons of Sakyamuni Buddha 
Eat milk foods and butter,
Wear robes of many types,
And never give up one piece.
If they could keep their senses under control,
Mount Vaidurya would be able to float.
i4ic King Asoka’s younger brother also said that the Sakya disciples 
were cheating the king into performing meritorious deeds. Upon 
hearing these words, King Asoka, trying to employ some expedient, said to his minister, “My younger brother believes in the 
heretics. We should try to employ some expedient to convert him
to the Buddha-dharma.” In reply to the king, the minister said, 
“What does Your Majesty wish me to do?” The king told him, “Now 
I am going to the bathroom to take a bath. I shall take off my crown 
and garments. You may dress my younger brother in my costume 
and ask him to ascend the throne.” The minister said in reply, 
‘Yes.”
King Asoka then went to the bathroom to take off his ornaments, and after the king had entered the bathroom, the minister
said to his younger brother, ‘You would have been king if it had not 
been for Asoka. Now you may try to put on this crown and the royal 
garments and ascend the throne.” Having said so, the minister
dressed the prince in the king’s garments and caused him to 
ascend the throne.
The minister then reported to King Asoka, saying, ‘Your servant has carried out the order of Your Majesty.” King Asoka c
to see his younger brother, who was wearing the crown and sitting 
on the throne, and said to him, “So you have assumed kingship 
even when I am not dead!” In a fit of rage the king called in the 
executioner, a fellow dressed in dark blue with dishevelled hair 
and holding a bell in his hand. Having come into the presence of 
the king, the executioner paid homage to him and said, “What do 
you wish me to do?” The king said, “I have discarded this younger 
brother of mine. You may kill him.” When the king had said this, 
a group of people holding weapons in their hands came up to 
surround the prince.
At that moment the minister saluted the king’s feet and said 
to him, “This is Your Majesty’s younger brother, and I beg Your 
Majesty to have patience and not to be angry with him.” King 
Asoka said to the minister in reply, “I shall be patient with him for 
seven days. As he is my younger brother, I shall give him the 
kingdom temporarily, allow him to be king for seven days, and 
provide him with various musicians and maids of honor for his 
amusement. All people should come to pay respects to him.”
Standing at the gate with a knife in hand, the executioner 
announced to the king every day, “One day has passed. There will 
be six days more!” [and so on.] So on the sixth day, he announced 
that there remained only one more day. On the seventh day, the 
royal ornaments, crown, and garments were returned to King 
Asoka. The minister and other people took Vitasoka to see the 
king, who asked him, “During the seven days of your kingship, how 
did you enjoy the pleasant music and various kinds of amusement?” In reply, the king’s brother uttered the following stanza:
He who has seen the beauties,
Heard the melodies,
And tasted the delicacies 
May answer your inquiries.
The king said again, “I gave you the kingdom so that you were king 
for seven days, and you enjoyed all kinds of amusement to your 
142a heart’s content, while numerous people came every day to pay 
homage and express good wishes to you. How can you say that you
did not see, hear, or taste anything delightful?” In reply, the prince 
again uttered the following stanza:
In the last seven days 
I neither saw nor heard anything,
Nor did I smell or taste flavor.
I could not feel the touch 
Of the ornaments I was wearing,
Or of the charming maids who were attending.
As I was thinking of dreadful death,
I lost the sensations of these things.
The songs of the nautch girls dancing,
The palaces and bedding,
The land and all the treasures,
Aroused in me no pleasure.
I only saw the executioner 
Standing at the gate with his cleaver.
I also heard the sound of his bell 
That reminded me of the knell.
The nail of death reached my heart
And rendered me numb to the five pleasures.
Being ill with fear of departing,
I could not sleep with composure.
While I thought death was approaching,
The night elapsed without my knowing.
King Asoka then said to his younger brother, “Vltasoka, as you 
were thinking of the pains of death just for one day, you did not 
attach yourself to the five best pleasures that were provided for 
you. In the same way, the homeless bhiksus meditate on the 
impermanence of the countless births and deaths on the basis of 
the twelve entrances. How can they have any passions? They also 
meditate on the pains of the hells and of the animals cruelly killing 
one another, on the hungry ghosts suffering from hunger and 
thirst, and on men always rushing about without ease to all places 
for a living, and also on the pains of the heavenly beings at the 
stage of decadence. All beings in these five ways of existence are
suffering mentally and physically without happiness. The bhiksus
also consider that all the five skandhas are impermanent, painful, void, egoless, and unsubstantial, just like an empty village 
without inhabitants. As the five skandhas are void and without an ego, the world is burning with the fire of impermanence. 
Since the Buddha’s disciples always contemplate in this way, how 
can they have any passions?” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
Just for a single day
You pondered on the fear of death
Without joy and pleasure
Nor with a mind of attachment.
The disciples of the Buddha 
Contemplate birth and death every day.
How can they have joy and pleasure 
And harbor minds of delusion?
On their food and garments,
As well as on their bedding,
They meditate upon how to gain liberation,
Free from mental attachment.
They see the corporeal body as an enemy,
The three realms as a house on fire.
They think of expedients 
By which to gain emancipation.
Taking deep delight in the law of liberation,
They crave none of the five desires.
Their minds resemble lotus flowers 
Standing in water without getting wet.
King Asoka employed this good expedient to convert Vltasoka to 
the Buddha-dharma, and Vltasoka, with folded hands, said to the 
king, ‘Your Majesty, I now take refuge in the Tathagata as well as 
his Dharma and the Sangha.” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
I take refuge in the Buddha,
Whose face resembles a lotus flower,
A shelter for divine and human beings.
I also submit to the pure Dharma and the Sangha.
King Asoka then embraced his younger brother’s neck and said to 
him, “I do not discard you. It was for the sake of converting you to 
the Buddha-dharma that I adopted this expedient.”
Vitas'oka offered various kinds of flowers and incense with 
the performance of music to the Buddha-stupas, and he also presented different kinds of food and drink as alms to the monks. 
Then he went to Kukkuta Monastery, where the Elder Yas'as, 
an arhat possessing the six supernatural powers, was residing. 
Upon arriving at the monastery, he sat face to face with Yasas, 
wishing to hear the Dharma from him. With his supernormal 
powers, Yasas perceived that Vltasoka had done good deeds in 
his previous lives and that this was his last birth with a corporeal body, as he would attain arhatship. The Elder preached 
the Dharma and praised the renunciation of home life. After 
hearing the Dharma, Vltasoka wished to renounce his home life 
and said to Yasas with folded hands, ‘You have preached the 
Dharma and Vinaya (disciplinary rules) well. May I renounce my 
home to be a fully ordained monk? I wish to lead a life of celibacy 
according to the Buddha-dharma.” Yasas said in reply, “Good man, 
you may go back to ask King Asoka whether he permits you to 
renounce your home.” Vltasoka returned to King Asoka and 
said to him with folded hands, “May Your Majesty allow me to 
renounce the home life, as I wish to lead a life of celibacy according to the Buddha-dharma.” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
My mind is confused in distraction,
Like an unhooked elephant.
The king’s will is an iron hook.
Do not stop me from leaving home.
The king is the lord of the earth,
And should allow me to leave my hearth.
For this world the Buddha is a ray,
And I wish to go along his Way.
Upon hearing these words, King Asoka embraced his younger 
brother’s neck and said with tears and sobbing, “Vitasoka, do not 
conceive such an idea. Why? Because the monks wear coarse and 
shabby clothes, eat what is given by others, and sleep under trees. 
i42c Now stop thinking about becoming a monk.” Vitasoka said in reply, 
“Your Majesty, I wish to become a monk not out of hatred, or 
craving, or poverty, or to evade some enemy. It is simply because I 
see that this world is full of pain and continual rebirths without 
emancipation, and I see that the Buddha-dharma is the only right 
path leading to freedom from rebirth without fear. So I wish to 
become a monk with pleasure.” King Asoka sobbed more piteously 
when he heard these words. Vitasoka then uttered the following 
stanza:
Rebirth is like a rope hanging,
Man is on it always swinging.
What is on it will drop down.
From union separation comes.
King Asoka then said to his younger brother, “Before becoming a 
monk, you have to practice begging for alms.” In the royal garden 
at the back of the palace, there was a big tree, under which grass 
was spread on the ground to provide a place for Vitasoka to stay. 
An earthen bowl was given to him so that he could beg alms from 
the palace. With begging bowl in hand, he went to the palace, 
where he obtained different varieties of the choicest food. The king 
became angry with the palace attendants and said to them, “Why 
do you give the best food to the mendicant? From now on you 
should give him coarse food.” Thus wheat was cooked and kept for 
a night and then given to him when it had turned sour. Vitasoka 
accepted the food and ate it without feeling disgusted. At this 
sight, King Asoka said to him, “Stop taking this food. I permit you 
to become a monk; but after becoming a monk, you should often 
come to see me.”
Then Vitasoka went to the Kukkuta Monastery, and when 
he reached there, he thought that if he became a monk at that 
place the people and environment would distract his mind from
cultivating the Way, and that he should go to become a monk at 
some distant place. So he travelled to the country of Videha, where 
he became a monk and engaged himself in meditation vigorously 
until he attained arhatship.
Having attained arhatship, the Elder Vitasoka enjoyed the 
bliss of emancipation and thought that as he had made an agreement with the king to see him often after becoming a monk, he 
should fulfill his promise.
Then he travelled by easy stages to the country of Pataliputra. 
Early in the morning, the Elder Vitasoka dressed himself and 
went to the city with his begging bowl to collect alms. He went from 
house to house and then to the palace of King Asoka, where he said 
to the gatekeeper, “Go in and inform the king that Vitasoka is 
outside the gate, wishing to see His Majesty.” The gatekeeper went 
in and informed the king, saying, “Vitasoka has arrived and 
wishes to see Your Majesty.” King Asoka said to the gatekeeper, 
‘You may bring him into the palace.” Vitasoka then entered the 
palace, and upon seeing him, King Asoka rose from his throne and 
143a prostrated himself, like a great tree falling on the ground, in order 
to worship him. Then he stood up and gazed at him with his hands 
joined palm to palm without feeling weariness. He uttered the 
following stanza with tears of emotion:
All living beings are happy 
To live in a harmonious family.
But you renounced your home 
To live a life quiet and calm.
Now I understand your mind.
With no amount of wisdom are you content.
At that time, the minister Sugupta saw that Vitasoka wore a robe 
made of cast-off rags. He carried an earthen bowl, went from house 
to house to collect alms, and without distinguishing in his mind 
accepted whatever food, coarse or fine, was given him. He said to 
King Asoka, “Vitasoka is content, with few desires, and has accomplished what he aimed to achieve. Your Majesty ought to be happy 
about it.” Why?
He, always practicing alms-begging,
Wearing cast-off rag clothing,
Living beneath a tree,
Has a mind in constant samàdhi.
His mind is broad without leakage;
His body is free from malady;
Leading a righteous life,
He is always cheerful.
King Asoka was greatly pleased to hear these words, and he 
uttered the following stanza:
You abandoned the Maurya clan,
The kingdom of Magadha,
Precious jewels of every kind,
And the best enjoyment of the five desires.
You rejoice at the four noble truths,
Free from arrogance, pride, and distress,
Practicing the Way with great diligence.
My country is glorified by your eminence.
The supreme Dharma, the ten powers 
You are qualified to possess.
King Asoka helped him to the seat of honor and served different 
kinds of food and drink to him with his own hands. After the meal, 
his eating bowl was washed and put aside. King Asoka sat before 
him to listen to his preaching, and in the course of preaching, 
Vitasoka uttered the following stanza:
Mental freedom you have now gained;
Non-laxity should also be attained.
The Three Treasures are not easy to meet.
Offerings should often be made to them.
King Asoka and five hundred courtiers, together with the people 
of the country, surrounded Vitasoka respectfully with folded hands 
to send him off. The courtiers and people uttered the following 
stanza:
King Asoka, the elder brother,
Sends off the younger one with respect.
The supreme fruit of renunciation 
Is now fully realized.
In order to reveal his merits, the Elder Vitasoka soared into the 
143b air, and all the people saw his departure. King Asoka and the 
multitude, folding their hands palm to palm, witnessed the event 
with fixed gaze, and [Asoka] uttered the following stanza:
Without fraternal affection,
Like a bird you fly through the air.
I am bound by love and passion,
Unable to go as freely as I care.
The supreme fruit of meditation 
Gives freedom to the body.
You may go anywhere at your discretion,
Without any impediment whatsoever.
Being blinded by lust and desire,
I could not see the Dharma.
By your supernormal powers,
You lifted me from lustful desire.
I was proud of my wisdom,
But you are the wisest of all.
We are attached to the world,
Not fearing it until we see the saint.
We are weeping and shedding tears,
Because you are leaving us forever.
Then the Elder Vitasoka repaired to a borderland, and upon 
reaching there he fell so seriously ill that his head was covered 
with boils. The king, hearing about it, dispatched attendants and 
physicians to cure him. When he was a little better some time 
later, both the physicians and the attendants were sent back. As 
he needed only milk for his nourishment, he went for convenience 
of begging alms to live at a place where there were many cows.
There was then a country called Punyavardhana, where all the 
people believed in heretics. One man who followed the heretical
dharma worshipped a naked god painted in the shape of the 
Tathagata and paid homage to it at its feet. A Buddhist disciple 
saw this matter and reported it to Kang Asoka. After hearing it, the 
king ordered that the man be brought into his presence. Now 
within the domain of King Asoka, all the Yaksas (demons) in the 
air up to the height of half a yojana were under his control, and all 
the Nagas one yojana below the earth also belonged to him. Upon 
hearing the order of the king, the Yaksas in an instant brought the 
heretical disciple and his picture into the presence of the king. 
Being greatly enraged by the sight, he had all the heretics of 
Punyavardhana killed; and one hundred eight thousand heretics 
were slaughtered in one day.
There was another heretical follower who accepted a heretical 
dharma, worshipped a naked god painted in the shape of the 
Tathagata, and paid it homage at its feet. When King Asoka heard 
about it, he again ordered his men to arrest that man and his 
relations, all of whom were put in a house, which was then set on 
fire. The king also issued a decree, saying, “If anyone can get the 
head of a Nirgrantha, I shall award him a piece of gold.”
At that time, the Elder Vltasoka came to a place where cows 
i43c were reared and spent one day there. As he had been sick for many 
days, his hair and beard were long, his nails were sharp, and he 
was wearing a coarse garment without color or brilliance. A cowherd woman thought in her mind, “Here comes a Nirgrantha to our 
house.” And then she said to her husband, ‘You can kill this 
Nirgrantha and send his head to King Asoka, and you will surely 
get a gold coin.” The husband, hearing this, unsheathed his sword 
and went to Vltasoka with the intention of decapitating him. The 
elder, reflecting that nowhere could one escape from one’s retribution, faced death as it befell him. His head was then sent to King 
Asoka by the man wishing to win the reward of gold.
When the king saw that the hair on the head was of an 
attractive variegated color, he had a suspicion in his mind 
and inquired of the physicians and attendants about it. They 
said to the king, “This is the head of Vltasoka!” Upon hearing these 
words, the king fainted and fell to the ground. When water was
sprinkled on him, he recovered and got to his feet after a long 
while.
A minister said to the king, “Even a man who is perfectly free 
from passions is not spared from this suffering. It befits Your 
Majesty to grant freedom from fear to living beings.” Asoka followed this advice and issued an order that no Nirgranthas should 
be killed any more.
Then the bhiksus had a doubt about it and inquired of Upagupta, 
“What deed did Vltasoka commit in the past, that he suffered this 
retribution of being murdered by another?”
Upagupta said in reply, “Elders, listen. In the past there was 
a hunter who killed many herds of deer. In the great forest there 
was a spring where the hunter spread his net and tied the rope 
beside the water. In this way he killed many deer every day. That 
was a time when the Buddha was not yet born in the world. One 
day apratyekabuddha took his meal beside the water. After taking 
his meal, he bathed and went to sit underneath a tree. All the deer, 
smelling the fragrance of the pratyekabuddha, did not go to the 
waterside. When the hunter came and did not see any deer, he 
traced the footmarks and came to the pratyekabuddha. On seeing 
him, the hunter thought in his mind, ‘It is because of this man 
sitting here that the deer did not come.’ Thereupon he killed the 
pratyekabuddha with a knife. You should know, Elders, that that 
hunter of bygone days was today’s Vltasoka. As he had killed many 
deer every day in the past, he suffered various ailments in his 
present life. His murder of the pratyekabuddha caused him to 
suffer pains of every description in hells for innumerable years. He 
was always killed each of the five hundred times he was born as a 
human being. This was his last birth; but even though he had 
attained arhatship, he was still murdered by a man.”
The bhiksus again asked Upagupta, “But how did this person 
come to be born into a great clan and attain arhatship?” Upagupta 
said in reply, “Formerly, when he became a monk in the Dharma 
i44a of Kasyapa Buddha, he loved to give alms and often advised lay 
supporters to offer various kinds of food and drink to the Sangha. 
There was then a stupa containing the Buddha’s hair and nail
relics, to which he offered incense, flowers, banners, and canopies, 
as well as different kinds of musical performances. It was because 
of this karma that he was born into a great clan. And for a hundred 
thousand years he constantly practiced celibacy with a right vow, 
on account of which he attained arhatship.”
Chapter IV
The Causes of Kunala
King Asoka constructed eighty-four thousand stupas in one day, 
and on that day his wife Padmavati gave birth to a son with 
regular features and particularly beautiful eyes. No one saw him 
but loved him. A palace attendant reported to the king that by the 
merits of the king, his wife had given birth to a son. The king was 
pleased to hear this news and uttered the following stanza:
I am today 
Greatly pleased.
My clan of Maurya 
Is well known to all.
May my son in the palace 
Increase the Dharma!
Thus the child was named Dharmavivardhana (Dharma-increasing). 
Then he was carried in to be shown to the king, who was glad to 
see him and uttered the following stanza:
Beautiful are the eyes of my son,
Created by merits previously done.
Bright and very brilliant,
Resembling utpala (blue lotus) flowers,
These eyes of merit 
Adorn his features.
His face is regular and dignified,
Like a full moon in the season of autumn.
King Asoka assembled his ministers and said to them, “Have you 
ever seen eyes such as those of this child?” The ministers said in
63
Chapter IV
144b
reply, “We have really never seen such eyes among human beings. 
But in the Snow Mountains there is a kind of bird called a kunala
whose eyes resemble the eyes of this child.” And they uttered the 
following stanza:
On top of the Snow Mountains,
At the place of precious flowers,
The birds called kunala
Stay in their nests.
The eyes of this child 
Resemble those of the bird.
The king then ordered, “Bring that bird here.” The Yaksas in the air 
up to the height of half a yojana heard the king’s words, and the 
Nagas one yojana below also heard his words. In an instant, the 
Yaksas brought a bird to the king, who compared its eyes with the 
eyes of his son and found no difference between them. Thus he gave 
the child the name of the bird and uttered the following stanza:
The king of men on the earth 
Uses the name of kunala,
With most beautiful eyes,
As his son’s name,
So that on this earth,
His fame will spread far.
When Kunala had grown up, he was given a lady named Kancanamala to be his wife. Once King Asoka brought him to Kukkuta 
Monastery, where lived an elderly monk by the name of Yasas, an 
arhat possessing the six supernatural powers. At that moment 
Yasas foresaw that before long Kunala would lose his eyes. So he 
said to the king, ‘W hy do you not ask Kunala to do his own deeds?” 
King Asoka said to Kunala, “The Most Virtuous One asks you to do 
what you should do. You should follow him.” Then Kunala worshipped at Yasas’ feet and said to him, “Most Virtuous One, teach 
me what I should do.” Yasas said in reply, “Eyes are impermanent. 
You should meditate on this.” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
64
The Causes of Kunala
You, Kunala,
Should meditate on the eyes 
As impermanent with the pain of illness,
Where all things converge.
Ordinary people have upside-down views,
Giving rise to what is wrong.
Kunala then sat alone at a quiet place in the palace to meditate 
that the eyes and other sense organs were painful and impermanent. King Asoka’s chief wife Tisyaraksita went to Kunala and saw 
that he was sitting alone. When she saw his eyes, a surge of lustful 
desire arose in her mind and she embraced him with her arms 
while she uttered the following stanza:
A strong fire of love 
Is burning in my heart,
Like flames licking a dry vine.
Come, you, to satisfy my mind.
When Kunala heard these words of hers, he plugged his ears with 
his hands and uttered the following stanza:
At this place of mine,
No such words should be said.
You are a mother to me,
And I am a son to you.
Passions of this illegal kind 
Should be put far away.
Why should you for this matter 
Open the gate to the evil way?
144c As Tisyaraksita’s desire was not satisfied, she became angry and 
resentful and uttered the following stanza:
I fixed my mind of love upon you,
But you have no love in your mind.
Since you dislike me,
You will soon be wiped out.
Kunala said in reply:
I would rather die
For the Dharma of purity than live.
I would not stay in life 
With a mind of obscenity.
One who has an evil mind
Loses the good Dharma of Devas and men.
If the good Dharma becomes imperfect,
On what will one’s life depend?
Tisyaraksita kept a constant watch over him with the intention 
of killing him. There was then in the north a country named 
Taksasila, which rebelled against King Asoka’s orders. When the 
king heard about it, he intended to go there himself, but his 
ministers said to him, “Kunala should be ordered to go. There is 
no need for you to go yourself.” King Asoka summoned Kunala 
and said to him, “You should go to that country.” Kunala replied 
to the king, “So be it.” King Asoka also uttered the following 
stanza:
At this moment,
I heard him saying, “So be it.”
Though he is my son,
He is also my heart.
As I remember him in my mind,
He is more lovely to me.
King Asoka then had the roads repaired. All corpses were removed 
and all aged and sick people were ordered to keep out of sight. The 
king rode in the same carriage with Kunala to see him off. When 
they were about to part near the road, he embraced his son’s neck 
and shed tears on seeing Kunala’s lovely eyes, while he said:
If anyone sees 
Kunala’s lovely eyes 
And is pleased,
All his ailments will be eased.
At that time, a Brahman physiognomist foresaw that Kunala 
would soon lose his eyes. On seeing that the king was gazing at his
son’s eyes without paying attention to anything else, he uttered 
the following stanza:
The prince has eyes of purity;
When the king sees them he feels happy.
Bright and beautiful are his eyes.
Why should they be lost?
All the people in this country,
When they see Kunala’s eyes,
Feel pleased,
As if enjoying heavenly bliss.
If they see him lose his eyes,
They will all be distressed.
i45a Kunala then gradually proceeded to the country of Taksasila. The 
people of that country, hearing about it, went out half a yojana to 
repair and decorate the road. They placed water everywhere in 
anticipation of the coming multitude. The people uttered the following stanza:
The people of Taksasila 
Hold water in precious jars 
And other offerings 
To greet Prince Kunala.
When the prince arrived, the people folded their hands and said to 
him, “We do not come to meet you to fight, nor do we bear any 
grudge against the great king. But the minister sent by the king 
to our country governs the state unjustly, and we wish him to be 
dismissed from office.” Then the people presented offerings to 
Prince Kunala and welcomed him to their country.
King Asoka then fell seriously ill; he vomited out of his mouth, 
and filthy fluid oozed from his pores. All the best physicians failed 
to cure him. King Asoka said to his ministers, “Recall Kunala. I 
shall consecrate him king and hand over the throne to him. Now I 
shall cling to this life no more.”
Tisyaraksita thought in her mind, “If Kunala becomes king, I 
shall certainly be put to death.” With this reflection in her mind,
she said to King Asoka, “I can cure the king and get rid of the 
disease. There is no need to send for any more physicians.” So the 
king listened to her words and refused to see any physicians. 
Tisyaraksita said to the physicians, “If there is anybody outside, 
male or female, who is suffering from the same disease as the king, 
you may bring that person in.”
There was then in the country of the Abhlras a man suffering 
from the same trouble as the king. The sick man’s wife consulted 
a physician and told him the symptoms of her husband’s illness. 
The physician said in reply, “Bring the man here. I wish to see 
him and write out a prescription for him.” Thus the woman 
brought the patient to the physician, who then sent him to the 
king’s wife.
The king’s wife put the sick man in a secluded place, had his 
abdomen cut open, and extracted both his “raw” and his “ripe” 
viscera. In his ripe viscus there was a big worm, and when it moved 
upwards vomit was ejected out of the mouth. Excrement was 
discharged below when it moved downwards. If it moved sideways, 
filthy fluids oozed from the pores. The king’s wife ground some 
mallika (jasmine) and placed it beside the worm, but it did not die. 
She then put some pippall (long pepper) beside it, and it still did 
not die. She again placed some dry ginger near the worm, and it 
still did not die. But it died instantly when she placed some garlic 
beside it.
The king’s wife reported this matter to the king, saying, “The 
king should now eat some garlic, which will cure the disease.” 
i45b The king said in reply, “Being a Ksatriya, I should not eat garlic.” 
The lady said, “For the sake of your body and life, it should be 
taken as medicine.” So King Asoka ate some garlic, and the worm 
was then killed and his disease was cured. Thus he became as fit 
and lively as before.
After having bathed, King Asoka said to his wife, “Whatever you desire to have now, I shall grant you as you wish.” The 
king’s wife said to him, “May the king allow me to be king for seven 
days.” The king said to his wife, “If you become king, you will 
certainly kill me.” His wife said again, “After seven days, I shall
return the kingship to you.” Thus King Asoka granted her the 
request.
The king’s wife reflected, “This is now the right time for 
me to punish Kunala.” Then she wrote a false letter in the name 
of King Asoka to the people of Taksasila, asking them to gouge 
out Kunala’s eyes. In the letter, there was written the following 
stanza:
I am now very powerful,
My prestigious name, fearful.
As Kunala, the prince,
Has committed an offence,
Now I order you people 
To extract his two eyes.
To perform this matter now 
You should take action in haste.
When the royal lady had written this letter, she needed to impress 
it with the king’s dental marks. King Asoka was then sleeping, and 
as the lady wished to seal the letter she went close to the king. The 
king woke up with a start. The lady asked the king, “Why are you 
frightened and startled?” The king said in reply to the lady, “I had 
an inauspicious dream in which I saw a vulture attempting to 
extract Kunala’s eyes. This is why I was startled with fear.” The 
lady said in reply, “The king need not be worried. Prince Kunala is 
now quite safe and sound.” In the second watch, the king had 
another dream; and he was again wakened from sleep with a start. 
He said to the lady, “I had another dream as ominous as the first 
one.” The lady asked, ‘What was it?” The king said in reply, “I saw 
that Kunala had long hair, a beard, and sharp nails; and he was 
unable to speak.” The lady said, “He is safe and sound. Do not 
worry about him.”
Afterwards when King Asoka fell asleep, the lady stealthily 
had the letter impressed with the king’s teeth and had it sent to 
the people of Taksasila.
At that time, King Asoka again dreamed that all his teeth had 
fallen out. When he had taken a bath early the next morning, he
summoned as a life-and-death matter a physiognomist and 
told him everything he had seen in his dream, saying, “You should 
read the meaning of my dream.” The physiognomist said in 
reply, “If anyone has had such a dream, his son will lose his sight. 
That is just like losing one’s son.” Then he uttered the following 
stanza:
If anyone dreams that his teeth have fallen out,
His son will lose his sight.
Since one’s son has lost his eyes,
It is the same as losing one’s son.
145c When King Asoka heard these words, he stood up facing the deities 
of the four quarters with folded hands and implored their protection with vows, saying:
I take refuge single-heartedly in the Buddha,
In the pure Dharma, and in the Sangha.
All the recluses of this earth 
Are most eminent in the world.
May all saintly monks 
Extend protection to Kunala.
When the messenger arrived with the letter in the country of 
Taksasila, the people of the country, upon seeing the letter, hid it 
away and did not give it to Kunala. They had affection for him and 
did not wish to cause resentment in his mind. The people also 
reflected, “Since the great King Asoka is so fearful that he has 
neither esteem nor confidence even in his own son and wishes to 
extract his eyes, how can he treat us without malignance?” And 
they uttered the following stanza:
Now as regards this Kunala,
He is no different from a great recluse.
Of all living beings 
He is the benefactor.
But to him the great king Asoka 
Has no mind of compassion,
Let alone to any other beings.
He will spare none from cruelties.
At last the people gave the letter to Kunala. Upon receiving the 
letter, Kunala said to the people, “If anyone can extract my eyes, 
he may do so at his own discretion.” The people then called in a 
candala and said to him, “Extract Kunala’s eyes.” The candala
said with folded hands, “I cannot do that. Why?”
If a man could erase
The full moon’s brilliant light,
He might extract the eyes
From your face, a moon that is bright.
Kunala took off his precious coronet and said to the candala, “If 
you can extract my eyes, I shall give this to you.” There was 
another man of abominable features marked with the eighteen 
marks of ugliness, who said, “I can extract your eyes.”
At that moment Kunala remembered what the most virtuous 
Yasas had told him, and he uttered the following stanza:
Things united must be separated:
This is a true saying.
When I think of this teaching,
I know that my eyes are not abiding.
My good teacher of the Way 
Is able to benefit me.
What he preaches on the Dharma
Concerns the causes and conditions of suffering.
I always remember and ponder 
That everything is impermanent.
This was taught by my teacher,
And I should deeply keep it in mind.
I do not fear the pain,
As I have seen that nothing is everlasting.
In compliance with the king’s order,
You may extract my eyes.
I have already imbibed 
The truth of impermanence.
Kunala then said to the ugly man, “You may gouge out one of my 
eyes and place it in my palm, as I wish to see it.” When that ugly 
man was about to take out Kunala’s eye, numerous people angrily 
scolded him and uttered the following stanza:
His eyes are pure and without stain,
Like the moon in the air.
You are extracting his eyes,
As one might pull a lotus from a pond.
Numerous people wailed and wept piteously, while the ugly man 
took out Kunala’s eye and put it in his hand. Accepting his eye in 
his hand, Kunala uttered the following stanza to it:
Originally, in former times,
You could see all colors.
But at this moment now,
Why can you not see them?
Formerly you caused the seer 
To have a mind of attachment;
Now I see that you are not real,
But false and unsubstantial 
Like a bubble on water 
That is void and without entity.
You are simply powerless 
And not independent.
One who sees this point 
Will suffer no more pains.
When Kunala was meditating on the impermanence of all dharmas, 
he attained the fruition of a srota-dpanna. After having gained the 
fruit, he said to the ugly man, ‘You may gouge out my other eye as 
you like.” The ugly man then cut out the other eye and placed it in 
Kunala’s hand. Although he had lost his eyes of flesh, he obtained 
the Eye of Wisdom; and then he uttered the following stanza:
At this moment now,
I forsake my eyes of flesh.
The Eye of Wisdom is hard to gain,
But J. have gained it now.
The king has abandoned me;
I am no more the king’s son.
As I have gained the Dharma,
I am a son of the Dharma King.
Now I have freely fallen 
From the palace of suffering,
And also freely ascended
To the palace of the Dharma King.
Knowing that it was Tisyaraksita who wanted to extract his eyes, 
Kunala uttered the following stanza:
May the king’s spouse 
Always enjoy wealth and bliss.
May she live forever 
And never come to an end.
It was through her expedient that 
My aim has been gained.
When Kunala’s wife Kancanamala heard that Kunala had lost his 
eyes, she went to her husband out of anxiety about him. At a place 
where there was a crowd of people, she saw Kunala, who had lost 
his eyes and was bleeding. Thus she fainted and fell to the ground, 
and people sprinkled water on her to restore her to consciousness. 
She wept and uttered the following stanza:
Your eyes were bright and lovable;
When I saw them formerly they were pleasurable.
Now they are apart from your body;
They cause in my mind a great worry.
Kunala said to his wife, “Do not weep. As I have done the deeds, 
I am receiving the retribution.” He also uttered the following 
stanza:
Everyone in this world
Receives his body according to his deeds.
The body is formed by pains of diverse kinds;
This you should understand.
All sorts of unions
Are bound to end in separation.
This matter you should know.
There is no need to weep with lamentation.
Kunala and his wife then returned to King Asoka’s palace from 
the country of Taksasila. As the two of them had never before, 
since their birth, walked on the ground, they were so weak 
and feeble that they could not bear the hardship of their 
labor. Kunala was good at playing the lute as well as singing 
and playing wind instruments. They followed the original road 
and begged for food to sustain their lives. Gradually they reached 
their own country and intended to enter the palace gate, but the 
gatekeeper did not allow them to go in. Since they could not get 
in, they withdrew and lodged in a carriage shed and stable. In 
the third division of the night, Kunala played his lute and 
started singing a song with the words, “My eyes are lost, but 
the four noble truths have I seen.” And he also sang the following 
song:
If a man possessing wisdom 
Sees the twelve entrances 
With the lamp of wisdom,
He may be free from rebirth.
The sufferings of the three realms of being 
Are the sufferings of one’s own mind.
As for all faults of the three realms of being,
One should perceive them now.
If one wishes to acquire supreme bliss,
One should ponder on the twelve entrances.
When King Asoka heard the voice singing the song, he was greatly 
pleased and uttered the following stanza:
Now the song that is being sung 
And the sound of the lute 
Sound like my son.
Kunala’s voice is heard;
If he has arrived,
Why does he not come to see me?
King Asoka called in a man [and said], “The voice I heard seemed 
to be that of Kunala; it was so melodious and yet so sad and 
sorrowful. That voice distracted my mind, as an elephant is restless with an uneasy mind when it has lost its son but hears its son’s 
trumpeting. You may go to see whether it is Kunala or not. If it is 
Kunala, then bring him here.”
Under the king’s order, that man went to the carriage shed and 
stable, where he saw a man who had lost both eyes and whose skin 
was tanned by the sun; he did not recognize the prince. He went 
back to report to the king, saying, “The person Your Majesty 
ordered me to see is a lonely blind man, staying with his wife in 
the carriage shed and stable. He is not Kunala.” Upon hearing 
i46c these words, King Asoka felt distressed and pondered over the 
matter. And then he uttered the following stanza:
I saw in a dream before 
That Kunala had lost his eyes.
Now this blind man
Must be Kunala without doubt.
Go there again
To bring him to this place.
As I am thinking of my son,
My mind is not at ease.
The man went again to the shed and asked Kunala, “Whose son 
are you? What is your name?” Kunala replied with the following 
stanza:
My father is named Asoka-vardhana,
With the surname of Maurya.
The whole great eartH
Is under his control,
And I am his prince,
By the name of Kunala,
Sumamed Dharmaraja Buddha.
I am the son of the Dharma King.
The messenger then brought Kunala and his wife to the palace. 
King Asoka saw that Kunala had been exposed to wind and sunburned and was dressed in a garment made of grass and rags, and 
that his appearance had changed beyond recognition. With a doubt 
arising in his mind, King Asoka asked him, “Are you Kunala?” 
“Yes, I am,” was the reply. When King Asoka heard this, he fainted 
and fell to the ground. An attendant saw what had happened to the 
king and uttered the following stanza:
When the king saw that Kunala 
Had no eyes in his face,
A painful feeling burned in his heart.
He fell down from his sofa.
The attendant then sprinkled water on the king to make him 
recover his consciousness. The king then returned to his seat and 
carried Kunala and sat him on his lap, weeping and shedding tears 
and stroking his head and face, while he recollected his features of 
bygone days. And he uttered the following stanza:
Those handsome eyes of yours,
Where are they now?
The causes of losing your eyes 
You should tell me.
Now you are deprived of your eyes,
As if the moon disappeared from the skies.
Your countenance has been altered.
By whom was it committed?
Your features in former days 
Resembled those of the fairies.
Who is the one so merciless 
As to have destroyed your eyes?
In this world of humanity,
Who has been your foe?
This is the root of my misery 
That arose therefrom.
By whom was this graceful 
Countenance of yours deformed?
The flames of mental fury 
Are consuming my body.
It is like the thunder
That destroys a forest of trees.
The lightning of hatred 
Has broken my heart.
147a The causes of such happenings
You should tell me without delay.
Kunala answered with the following stanza:
Has not the king heard the Buddha’s saying: 
Retribution can never be avoided?
Even a pratyekabuddha
Is not to be exempted.
All worldly beings
Were created by their own karma.
All karmic deeds, good or bad,
Will produce their effects at the right times. 
All sentient beings
Receive the result of what they have done. 
As I understand the cause,
I do not blame the defacer of my eyes.
This suffering is caused by myself 
And is not made by any other person.
Just like the karmic condition of my eyes, 
Which was not made by any other person, 
The sufferings of all living beings 
Are created in the same way,
By their own karmic force.
The king should know such is the case.
King Asoka, with a fire of resentment burning in his heart, again 
uttered the following stanza:
You just tell me who it was
And I shall not bear a mind of malice.
If you do not make a clean breast of it,
I shall feel distracted and disturbed.
When King Asoka came to know that it was done by Tisyaraksita, 
he called in the lady and uttered the following stanza:
Having committed an atrocity,
Why do you not sink into the ground?
You did not perform what was right 
But committed a great misdeed.
Since you have done evil,
I abandon you forever,
Just as a good-deed performer 
Would give up filthy lucre.
When King Asoka, with a fire of hatred burning in his heart, saw 
Tisyaraksita, he again uttered the following stanza:
At this moment now 
I wish to extract her eyes 
And use an iron saw 
To dismember her limbs,
To break her body with an axe,
To cut out her tongue with a knife,
To sever her neck with a sword,
To bum her frame in fire,
Or to force her to drink poison 
To do away with her life.
King Asoka said such things intending to punish Tisyaraksita. 
When Kunala heard these words, he had a mind of deep compassion and uttered the following stanza:
What Tisyaraksita has done 
Are nothing but evil deeds.
Now may the great king 
Not kill her for that reason.
None of the great virtues 
Can surpass forbearance.
As the World-honored One has said,
It is the first and foremost.
King Asoka did not listen to his son’s words but put Tisyaraksita 
into a lakuca house and set it on fire to bum her to death. He also 
issued an order to kill that man of Taksasila.
At that time, a bhiksu was doubtful about the matter and 
inquired of the most virtuous Upagupta, ‘"What deed did Kunala 
do in a past life, so that he is suffering this retribution in the 
present?” The virtuous monk said in reply, “Elder, listen. Long, 
long ago in the past, there was in the country of Varanasi a hunter 
who killed many deer in the Snow Mountains. Once when he went 
to the Snow Mountains a thunderbolt crashed in the sky, and five 
hundred deer, being frightened by the bolt, fled into a cave. Upon 
seeing this group of deer, the hunter caught every one of them. 
Then he thought in his mind, ‘If I kill all of them, their flesh will 
become rotten. I have no other choice but to extract both eyes from 
each of them, so that they will neither die nor run away, and I can 
gradually slaughter them afterwards.’ Having reflected in this 
way, he gouged out all their eyes. Elder, what do you think? That 
hunter was Kunala in a former life. Because he had extracted the 
eyes of the deer, he was always bom in hells for innumerable 
years. When he was released from the hells and was born in the 
human world, his eyes were always extracted for five hundred 
lives. His present life is the last residue of his retribution.”
The bhiksu inquired again, “What was the cause of his being 
bom into an eminent clan with a pair of handsome eyes and 
gaining arhatship?”
“Elder, listen,” said [Upagupta] in reply. “Long, long ago in 
the past at a time when the span of human life was forty thousand years, a Buddha, a fully enlightened one, by the name of 
Krakucchanda appeared in the world. When that Buddha had
done all he ought to have done in this world, he entered perfect
/
nirvana. There was then a king by the name of Subhavyuha, who 
constructed a stupa with the four precious substances for that 
Buddha, the World-honored One. After the king’s demise, his 
younger brother, who did not believe in the Buddha, secretly took 
away the jewels and gems with which the stupa was built, leaving 
only the earthwork and the wooden structure behind. All the 
people who saw that the stupa was damaged cried with regret and 
annoyance.
“The son of a householder asked the people, W hy are you 
crying with regret and annoyance?’ They said in reply, ‘Originally 
the stupa for the World-honored One had the four precious substances, but now they are destroyed and gone! Thus we are crying 
with regret and annoyance at the sight.’The son of the householder 
restored the stupa with the four precious substances as it was 
before and enlarged it so that it was broader and higher than it 
was at the beginning. He also made a golden image and placed it 
i47c in the stupa. After having done this, he made a vow, saying, ‘As 
Krakucchanda is the teacher of the world today, may my future 
teacher be the same as this Buddha now.’You should know, bhiksu,
that that son of a householder was Kunala. As the result of his 
mending and repairing the stupa of Krakucchanda Tathagata, he 
was born into a prominent clan in this life. Because he made 
an image of the Tathagata, his body in the present life is most 
handsome and graceful. And as he vowed to meet a good teacher, 
he now has Sakyamuni as his teacher and realizes the four noble 
truths.”
Chapter V
The Causes of Offering Half an Amra
Fruit to the Sangha
Having acquired firm faith, King Asoka asked the bhiksus, “Who 
has made the largest amount of offerings ever to the cause 
of the Buddha-dharma?” The bhiksus said in reply, “The Elder 
Anathapindada gave the largest amount of offerings.” The king 
asked again, ‘What amount of offerings was he able to give to 
the cause of the Buddha-dharma?” The bhiksus said in reply, 
“He spent a hundred crores of taels of gold.” Having heard this, 
King Asoka reflected, “If the Elder Anathapindada could spend a 
hundred crores of taels of gold, I should also spend a hundred 
crores of taels of gold in alms giving.”
King Asoka constructed eighty-four thousand stupas and 
offered one hundred thousand taels of gold each to the place where 
the Buddha was born, the place where he attained the Way, the 
place where he turned the Wheel of the Dharma, and the place 
where he entered nirvana, and also to each of the places where the 
various arhats entered nirvana. He also convened a great assembly of the four groups of Buddhist followers. He offered food at the 
same time in one day to three hundred thousand monks, of whom 
one-third were arhats and two-thirds were learners and zealous 
ordinary people. Again, King Asoka, retaining only his treasures, 
offered all his land, palace attendants, ministers, and Kunala, as 
well as himself, to the Sangha. He also presented four hundred 
thousand taels of gold in alms to the Sangha and paid an enormous amount of gold to redeem his land and his own person. 
Later, he offered ninety-six crores of taels of gold to the Sangha in 
alms.
When King Asoka was afflicted with a serious illness, he was 
very sad and worried. Upon hearing that the king was ill, the 
minister Radhagupta, who was the king’s friend and rejoiced at his 
good deed of offering sand as alms in a previous life, went to the 
king’s place and saluted him at his feet. And then he uttered the 
following stanza:
i48a Your face formerly resembled a lotus,
That no dust or filth could stain.
All enemies of great strength 
Could never get sight of the king,
Who was like the hot sun at the meridian 
Upon whose rays nobody could gaze.
How is it that today
You are shedding tears and sadly sobbing?
King Asoka answered with the following stanza:
Now I am sad and worried,
Not for the sake of my life or wealth
But because I shall leave the group of saints—
For this I am sad and worried.
All the disciples of the World-honored One 
Have achieved various kinds of merits.
With different sorts of food and drink,
I make daily offerings to them.
As I remember this matter,
I cannot help shedding tears.
“Moreover, Radhagupta, formerly I desired to offer one hundred 
crores of taels of gold to the Three Treasures, but my intention was 
not fulfilled. Now I intend to present forty [sic] crores of taels of 
gold in alms to satisfy my original intention.” After due consideration, he wished to send forty crores of taels of gold to Kukkuta 
Monastery.
At that time, Kunala’s son Sampadin was the crown prince. 
The minister said to the prince, “King Asoka will pass away very 
soon, and yet he wishes to send forty crores of taels of gold to
Kukkuta Monastery. As all kings depend on wealth for their power, 
the prince should order the treasure keeper not to allow the gold 
to be taken out.” Thus the prince issued the order accordingly, and 
the edict of King Asoka was not put in force. But golden vessels 
were provided for the king to take his meal. After taking his meal, 
he ordered that the golden vessels be sent to Kukkuta Monastery. 
Thus golden vessels were withheld, and silver ones were allowed 
for his use. After taking his meal, the king again ordered that the 
silver vessels be sent to Kukkuta Monastery. So silver vessels were 
withheld, and iron ones were provided for the use of the king. But 
after taking his meal, he again ordered that they be sent to 
Kukkuta Monastery. Then iron vessels were also withheld, and 
earthenware vessels were allowed for his use. Then King Asoka 
had nothing more in his possession except half an amra (mango) 
fruit in his hand. As King Asoka was greatly distressed in his 
mind, he summoned his ministers and people and said to them all 
harmoniously, “Who is now the lord of this earth?” The ministers 
rose up to salute him and said with folded hands, “Only heaven 
and nobody else is the lord.” Then King Asoka shed tears that 
rolled down like rain, and he uttered the following stanza:
I, King Asoka of today,
Have no more sovereignty 
And only half an amra fruit 
At my own disposal.
What is the use of wealth and nobility,
Which are like water flowing in the Ganges?
Formerly I possessed the land of the country 
And was the foremost rich and powerful man.
Now suddenly poverty has befallen me.
I have no more free control over anything.
All unions and meetings 
Are bound to end in separation.
The Tathagata’s words of the true Dharma 
Nobody is able to comprehend.
Whatever I decreed in former days
Never met with any hindrance,
Like the mind and thought consciousness,
Which are free under favorable conditions.
But what I order now
Is like flowing water impeded by rocks.
All my foes and enemies 
I have subdued in former times.
All the land under the rule of the king 
Sustained the poor and those in desolation.
I have no more brilliant light,
Like the moon obscured by the clouds.
I am also like an asoka tree
Whose flowers and leaves are withered.
Such am I, King Asoka,
In the same poverty and plight.
King Asoka called an attending minister named Bhadramukha 
and said to him, “Now I have lost my sovereignty and I wish you 
to be my last messenger. This is the only thing you should do for 
me. Send this half an amra fruit to Kukkuta Monastery and 
announce my words, saying, ‘King Asoka worships at the monks’ 
feet. Formerly I possessed the land of the whole of Jambudvlpa, 
but now I have only half an amra fruit. This is my last alms, which 
I hope the monks will accept. Although this is a small thing, the 
beneficial merit of offering it to the monks is great.’ ” And he also 
uttered the following stanza:
I was formerly a king of men,
Living with sovereignty in my palace.
Impermanence is the peculiarity of the self,
Which will vanish very soon.
Those who can cure the disease 
Are the holy fields of blessedness.
Now I have no medicine.
May you save and help me.
This half an amra fruit 
Is my last alms.
Small alms may bring great benefit;
Thus you should accept it.
Under the king’s order, the messenger sent the half an amra fruit 
to Kukkuta Monastery. Before the elder monk he offered it to the 
Sangha and uttered the following stanza with his hands joined 
palm to palm:
The whole earth is under the one umbrella 
Of the king’s rule without hindrance,
Like the brilliant light of the sun 
Shining upon all places.
Of his fancied good deeds 
The merit has come to the end,
As the sun, sinking down into the earth,
Has no more brilliant light.
With worship and veneration,
He offers half an amra fruit
As a sign of his merit’s termination;
It is his last gift.
At that time, the Elder assembled the bhiksus and said to them, 
“Now you should cherish a mind of fear. Just as the Buddha has 
said, it is fearful to see impermanence manifested in other persons. Whoever could bear it without a feeling of abhorrence and 
abandonment? Why?”
Brave and able to give alms 
Was King Asoka of the Maurya clan,
Who had under his rule the great earth,
Jambudvipa, under his sovereignty.
His recompense is ended today.
He has nothing more than an amra.
All treasures on the great earth 
Were under his protection.
This King Asoka of today 
Gives half an amra in alms.
Ordinary beings of all realms of existence
Are proud of the force of their merit and virtue.
We should tell them about impermanence 
To arouse their feelings of abhorrence.
When the monks received King Asoka’s half an amra fruit, they 
crushed it into pulp and mixed it in soup, which was then served 
to all members of the Sangha.
King Asoka said to Radhagupta, “Who is the king now?” 
Radhagupta, saluting him at his feet, said with joined hands, 
“Heaven is the lord of earth, and nobody else is.” King Asoka, who 
was then supported by some people, looked around at the four 
quarters and said toward the place of the monks with his palms 
joined together, “With the exception of my treasures, I now offer 
the great earth and even the great sea, together with everything else, to the Sangha.” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
Water is the garment of the earth;
The seven jewels adorn its surface,
Which supports all living beings 
As well as all the mountains.
Now I give up all these things 
As alms to the monks.
From the monks I shall gain the fruit;
Thus I am giving them these things as gifts.
By the blessing of this alms-giving,
I do not seek the place of Sakra,
Nor to find pleasure in the heaven of Brahman,
Nor to be the lord of all parts of the earth.
I wish to pray by this blessing 
Only for the freedom of my mind,
To share the Dharma of the saints,
Which can never be seized by others.
King Asoka wrote this stanza on a piece of tala leaf and sealed it 
with the marks of his teeth. Holding this document in his hand, he 
joined his palms toward the place of the monks and said to them,
“I offer this great earth and everything to the Sangha.” After 
having said so, he passed away.
Then the ministers adorned a hearse with multicolored silk as 
an offering for the body of the king. After making the offering, they 
intended to perform the ceremony of enthronement by sprinkling 
sea water upon the head of the crown prince. Radhagupta said to 
the ministers, “The whole great earth has been offered to the 
Sangha by the great King Asoka.” The ministers said in reply, 
“Then what shall we do?” Radhagupta replied, “Formerly King 
Asoka desired to offer one hundred crores of taels of gold as alms 
to the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha. When he had given 
ninety-six crores of taels of gold, he wished to complete the round 
figure, but the ministers did not agree with him. As the king 
was discontented, he offered the whole great earth as alms to 
the Sangha.” Then the ministers took out forty crores of taels of 
gold to redeem the great earth and performed the ceremony of 
enthronement by sprinkling sea water upon the head of Prince 
Sampadin.
Sampadin’s son was Brhaspati, Brhaspati’s son was Vrsasena, 
Vrsasena’s son was Pusyavarman, and Pusyavarman’s son was 
Pusyamitra. When Pusyamitra ascended the throne, he assembled 
the ministers [and asked them], “By what expedient means can I 
make my name everlasting?” The ministers said in reply, “Your 
Majesty’s surname is derived from King Asoka, who constructed 
eighty-four thousand stupas so that the Buddha-dharma did not 
perish; and his name is still well known. Your Majesty should now 
construct eighty-four thousand stupas.” The king said in reply, 
“The great King Asoka possessed a great divine power unsurpassed by anyone. Is there any other means for me to keep my 
name known forever?”
There was then a Brahman, an adept in incantation but an 
ordinary person not believing the Buddha-dharma, who said to the 
king, “There are two causes that may make one’s name everlasting. The first is to do evil and the second to perform good deeds. 
The great King Asoka constructed eighty-four thousand stupas;
but if Your Majesty were to destroy them now, your name would be 
everlasting.”
When King Pusyamitra intended to destroy the Buddhadharma, he arrayed his four divisions of troops and went to 
Kukkuta Monastery. Upon arriving at the gate of the monastery, 
he heard the roar of a lion. Being greatly frightened, the king 
returned to the country of Pataliputra. In this manner he went to 
Kukkuta Monastery three times, and each time the same thing 
happened to him.
When he returned to that country, he assembled the monks of 
that monastery and said to them, “Now I intend to destroy the 
Buddha-dharma. Among you monks, there are some who guard 
the stupas and some who protect the monastery. Each of you 
i49b should tell me of his own case.” All the monks said together, ‘We 
all protect the stupas.” Then the king executed the Elder monk and 
killed all the other monks.
At that time, the country of Sakala was under the king’s 
domain. He said to the people of that country that anyone who 
could get the head of a bhiksu would be rewarded with golden 
money. In that country there was a monastery by the name of 
Dharmaraja, in which lived an arhat. A man who intended to get 
his head said to the king, “There is a bhiksu in that monastery. I 
wish to take his head and send it to Your Majesty.” Having heard 
this, the king desired to take the head of the bhiksu himself. At 
that moment the bhiksu was absorbed in the intense contemplation of perfect cessation; and by the power of the contemplation, he 
was invulnerable to knife, stick, fire, and poison. Since he could 
not kill the bhiksu, the king went away to some other place and 
reached the country of Kosthaka. In that country there was a 
Yaksa deity who was guarding the Buddha’s tooth relic. The Yaksa 
reflected, “The Buddha-dharma is going to perish. But as I am 
observing the precepts, I can no longer kill any living creature. I 
have a daughter, whom the Yaksa Krmisa originally wished to 
marry. But as he often committed evil deeds in former times, I did 
not give my permission. Now, for the sake of protecting the Buddhadharma I should give her to him in marriage.”
There was another powerful Yaksa who always protected King 
Pusyamitra. Owing to his power nobody could injure the king. The 
deity who guarded the Buddha’s tooth relic led away to the South 
Sea the Yaksa who protected the king; and at that moment the 
Yaksa Krmisa brought a great mountain and pressed it on King 
Pusyamitra and his four divisions of troops, who all died instantly. 
Thus that mountain was named Sunihita (Well Placed). Since 
King Pusyamitra was killed, the great Maurya clan died out.
Chapter VI
The Causes of the Buddha’s Prediction
Concerning Upagupta
When the Buddha wished to enter nirvana, he converted the Naga 
kings Apalala and Gopalacandala; and after having done so, he 
came to the country of Mathura. In that country he told Ananda, 
“One hundred years after my nirvana, there will be in this country 
of Mathura a perfumer by the name of Gupta whose son Upagupta 
will be a Buddha without the special marks. He will perform the 
functions of a Buddha and teach many people to achieve arhatship. 
i49c Into this cave, which is eighteen cubits long and twelve cubits 
broad, he will ask each of his disciples to put a chip four inches long 
and thereby eventually fill up the cave. Ananda, you should know 
that after me Upagupta will be the foremost in edifying his disciples. Ananda, do you see that green mountain in the distance?” 
Ananda said in reply, “I see it, World-honored One!” The Buddha 
said, “That mountain is named Urumanda. One hundred years 
after the Tathagata’s nirvana, the bhiksu Sanakavasin will build 
a monastery on that mountain and preach the Dharma to edify 
Upagupta, who will become a monk. In the country of Mathura 
there will be two brothers named Nata and Bhata. Being the sons 
of a wealthy person, they will be donors for the construction of the 
monastery on Mount Urumanda. Thus the monastery will be 
named Natabhatika. Ananda, you should know that this monastery will be the best place for meditation.”
Ananda wondered how Upagupta would benefit so many people. The Buddha said to Ananda, “You should not wonder at this 
matter. Even long ago in the past when he was bom in an evil path 
[as a monkey], he already benefitted many people. Again, beside
Urumanda Mountain on its three sides, there were in the past five 
hundred pratyekabuddhas on one side, five hundred recluses on 
another side, and five hundred monkeys on the third side. Among 
the monkeys there was a chief monkey who went to the pratyekabuddhas. Being delighted to see them, he picked fruits and flowers 
from the trees and offered them to the pratyekabuddhas. The 
pratyekabuddhas were sitting cross-legged, and the monkey paid 
homage to them one by one. After having worshipped them, the 
monkey sat erect at the last seat after the monks, and he did 
so every day. When all of the pratyekabuddhas entered nirvana, 
the monkey did not know it and made offerings to them as before. When he saw that the pratyekabuddhas did not accept his 
offerings, he dragged their clothes and pulled their feet, but the 
pratyekabuddhas did not move. Then the monkey realized that all 
the pratyekabuddhas were dead. He cried and wept sorrowfully, 
and went to the recluses.
“The five hundred recluses were lying on thorns and thistles, 
and the monkey, imitating the recluses, also lay on thorns and 
thistles. He also imitated the recluses by lying on ashes and 
earth and scorching himself with heat from five directions as the 
recluses did. When they had gone away after scorching themselves, the monkey quenched the piles of fire with water and 
hid the ashes away. He pulled up the thorns and thistles on which 
the recluses had lain and threw them away. He also cleared 
away the ashes on which they had lain. The recluses grasped the 
branches of trees to suspend themselves in the air. The monkey 
loosened their hands and made them drop to the ground. He often 
taught the recluses how to behave themselves in the four respectinspiring forms of demeanor in walking, standing, sitting, and 
lying. After having taught them this, he sat upright before them to 
practice concentration and said to them, ‘All of you should sit like 
this.’ The five hundred recluses then sat together with him in 
150a meditation. Having no teacher to preach the Dharma to them, 
the recluses meditated on the thirty-seven classified ways leading 
to enlightenment and attained the path of the pratyekabuddha.
Having attained the path, they reflected, ‘It is owing to this
monkey that we have attained the holy path.’ Thus they offered 
incense, flowers, food, and drink to the monkey. When the monkey 
came to the end of his life, the pratyekabuddhas cremated his body 
with fragrant wood.”
The Buddha said to Ananda, “That monkey was Upagupta. 
Even in an evil path of existence, Upagupta did great benefit for 
many people. One hundred years after my nirvana, he will again 
perform great beneficial deeds on Mount Urumanda.”
At that time, the World-honored One said to Ananda, “Hold a 
corner of my robe.” Then the World-honored One lifted Ananda’s 
physical body into the air, and they went together to the country 
of Kasmira. Upon arriving there, [the Buddha] said to Ananda, 
“Do you see the many mountains and forests here?” Ananda said 
in reply, “I see them, World-honored One!” He again told Ananda, 
“One hundred years after my nirvana, there will be in this country of Kasmira the bhiksu Madhyantika, who will establish the 
country of Kasmira in this land.” Then the Buddha gradually 
proceeded to the city of Kusinagara. When the time of his nirvana 
arrived, he told the Elder Mahakasyapa, “Now I wish to enter 
nirvana. You should collect the Dharma-pita/ea, to make it last 
one thousand years in order to absorb and convert all living 
beings.” Mahakasyapa said to the Buddha, “World-honored 
One, I shall act according to the instructions of the World-honored 
One.”
The Buddha then thought of Sakra. Being aware of the
Buddha’s mind, Sakra, the Lord of Devas, came to the Buddha.
The World-honored One told Sakra,“Kausika, you should protect
/
and maintain the Dharma-pitaka.” Sakra said to the Buddha, 
“World-honored One, I shall do so.” The World-honored One then 
thought of the Four Heavenly Kings, who, knowing the mind of the 
Buddha, came to the Buddha. The Buddha said again to the Four 
Heavenly Kings, “After my nirvana, the four of you should protect 
and maintain the Dharma -pitaka. Even in the future, during the 
times of the three wicked kings, you four together should protect 
and maintain the Dharma-pifcz&a.” The Four Heavenly Kings said 
to the Buddha, “We shall do so, World-honored One!”
At that time, having entrusted the Dharma-pifo&a to Mahakasyapa and Sakra as well as to the Four Heavenly Kings, the 
World-honored One returned to the country of Mathura, gradually 
proceeded to the twin sala trees in the city of Kusinagara, and 
told Ananda, “The time of my nirvana is approaching. Make a bed 
for me to the north of the twin sala trees. At midnight tonight I 
shall enter perfect nirvana.” And he also uttered the following 
stanza:
Bottomless is the sea of birth and death,
With waves and deep whirlpools.
Old age and sickness are the shore 
From which I have crossed the sea.
Intending to enter the land of no sorrow,
I give up this body as a raft.
Rebirth is like the sea,
With fearful old age as its water.
Sakyamuni is the bull king 
Who has crossed the sea of rebirth,
Like a man depending upon a raft 
Who safely reaches the other shore.
This has been extensively related.
After the Buddha’s nirvana, eight stupas were erected to 
preserve his relics. The ninth stupa contained a water pot and the 
tenth one was a stupa of embers. Thus a stanza was uttered as 
follows:
Eight stupas were as tall as mountains,
Relics were preserved underneath.
The ninth one was a stupa of the water pot,
And the tenth one a stupa of embers.
f
Sakra, the Lord of Devas, and the Four Heavenly Kings offered all 
kinds of incense and flowers as well as different kinds of music to 
the relics, and he said, “The World-honored One entrusted us with 
the Dharma-pifa&a and entered nirvana. Now we should comply 
and protect the Buddha-dharma.” Then Sakra said to Dhrtarastra,
“You should protect the Buddha-dharma in the east.” He said to 
Virudhaka, “You should protect the Buddha-dharma in the south.” 
He said to Virupaksa, “You should protect the Buddha-dharma in 
the west.” And he said to Kuvera, <rYou should protect the Buddhadharma in the north.”
The World-honored One said, “After my death three wicked 
kings will come to live among you. If they destroy the Buddhadharma, you should defend and protect it.”
Then the Buddha entered nirvana along with innumerable 
arhats. A sorrowful voice was heard in the air, uttering the following stanza:
What a pity that the disciples of the Buddha 
Have all entered nirvana.
Today in this world 
Everything is empty and void.
The shadow of ignorance darkened the lamp of the right Dharma. 
All the arhats of great virtue entered nirvana. Nobody was there 
to guard and protect the Buddha-dharma any more, and [it seemed 
that] the right Dharma of the Tripitaka would not last long.
At that time, Sakra and the Four Heavenly Kings as well as 
countless divine beings went together to Mahakasyapa. Upon 
arriving there they worshipped at Kasyapa’s feet and said, “The 
World-honored One has entrusted the Bharma-pitaka to you, Most 
Virtuous One, and to us. Most Virtuous One, you should now 
protect the Buddha-dharma together with us. All the Buddhadharma should be collected and must not be allowed to disperse. 
Now the Buddha-dharma, supported and accepted by divine beings 
and men, will stay in the world for one thousand years for the sake 
of absorbing and converting all living beings.”
Then Kasyapa struck a bell; and by his supernatural power 
the sound issued from his mouth, telling all people in Jambudvipa 
about it. There were then five hundred arhats staying at Kusii 50c nagara. Kasyapa said to the Elder Aniruddha, “Now who is absent from the assembly of arhats?” Aniruddha said in reply, 
“Gavampati is now at the Sirisa Palace in heaven. He is absent at
the moment.” The most virtuous Kasyapa asked the bhiksus, “Who 
is the youngest person in this assembly?” The arhat Purna said in 
reply, “I am the youngest one.” Mahakasyapa said to him, “Can you 
accept the instructions of the Sangha?” Purna answered, “I can.” 
Kasyapa said again, “Good man, it is excellent, truly excellent, 
that you can accept the instructions of the Sangha. Now you may 
go to the Sirisa Palace in heaven, to Gavampati, and tell him, 
‘Mahakasyapa and the monks summon you to come down. There 
is a function of the Sangha to be done. You must come quickly.’ ” 
And he also uttered the following stanza:
You may go, good man,
/ _
To the wood of Sinsa.
Leave us here and go
To Gavampati.
_ /
Purna then went to the Sirisa Palace and said to Gavampati, 
“Kasyapa and the monks who are living in perfect harmony in 
Jambudvipa have a function of the Sangha that requires you to go 
down in haste.” Gavampati said in reply, “Good man, you should 
say the Buddha and the monks instead of Kasyapa and the monks. 
Why? Because, the Buddha having entered nirvana, the heretics 
and the like might despise the Buddha-dharma, and moreover 
some evil bhiksus might try to cause a schism in the Sangha. The 
heretics might say, ‘Since the Buddha has entered nirvana, the 
Dharma has also completely disappeared, and the bhiksus know 
nothing of it.’ Formerly when the Buddha was in the world, his 
light of wisdom made the world bright and brilliant. Now he is 
dead, and the world has become dark. What is the use of my going 
there?” He also uttered the following stanza:
The whole world is now empty;
Nowhere is delightful anymore.
Without the Tathagata to preach the Dharma,
There is nothing to be done in Jambudvipa.
Now I wish to stay here
To enter nirvana.
“Now you may return there and tell them my mind, saying, 
‘Gavampati worships Mahakasyapa and the monks,’ and repeat 
the above stanza.”
The whole world is now empty;
Nowhere is delightful anymore.
Without the Tathagata to preach the Dharma,
There is nothing to be done in Jambudvipa.
Now I wish to stay here 
To enter nirvana.
i5ia After having said these words, Gavampati entered nirvana.
When Purna returned to Jambudvipa, he uttered the following 
stanza:
Superior Sangha of great virtues:
The venerable Gavampati 
Said with veneration:
“Since the Buddha has entered nirvana,
Today I shall also 
Enter nirvana.
Just as when the great elephant died,
His son followed suit.”
At that time Mahakasyapa made a rule: From then onward all 
monks should live in harmony to collect the Dharma-pito&a. Until 
this function was completed, none of the bhiksus should enter 
nirvana. And he also uttered the following stanza:
From today onward
All monks should live in harmony.
As long as the Dharma-pita/ea is not collected,
None should enter nirvana.
When the five hundred arhats were living in harmony, Mahakasyapa informed the Sangha, saying, “This Elder Ananda has 
always followed the Tathagata. He is getting old now, and 
all monks should respect him.” He also uttered the following 
stanza:
This Elder Ananda
Received and upheld what the Buddha said.
He is sharp-witted and has intelligence 
And always followed the Tathagata’s steps,
Understanding the Buddha-dharma with a pure mind 
Thus we should respect him,
As he is beneficial to all monks
And is praised by the One with Ten Powers.
At that time, Mahakasyapa said to the bhiksus, “If we collected the 
Dharma-pitaka at this place, many monks would come here in 
crowds and would certainly weep with grief, which would disturb 
our Dharma function. We should go to the country of Magadha, 
where the Buddha attained enlightenment, to collect the Dharmapitaka.”
Kasyapa and the five hundred arhats then went to the city 
ofRajagrha, while Ananda, supported by the Elder Vrjiputra, 
travelled to the country Vrji. When they arrived there the four 
groups of devotees of that country were sad and grieved to hear 
that the Buddha had entered nirvana. At that time Ananda 
reflected, “If the four groups are upset and grieved in their minds, 
how can I preach the Dharma?” The Elder Vrjiputra thought in his 
mind, “I should observe the mind of the upadhyaya (teacher) to see 
whether he is a saint or an ordinary person.” Then he found that 
the upadhyaya still had a mind attached to learning and was not 
free from the world of desire. Having seen this, he went to Ananda, 
and upon reaching there, he uttered the following stanza:
You should go under a tree 
To fix your mind on nirvana.
While Gautama was sitting in meditation,
Very soon he attained nirvana.
i5ib At that time, the Elder Ananda, under the edification of Vrjiputra, 
spent the whole day in walking and sitting to wash his mind of the 
five covers. He did so from the first till the fifth watch in the night; 
and when Venus appeared, he went out to wash his feet. Having 
washed his feet, he returned to the monastery and intended to lie
down with his right side on the bed. Before his head touched the 
pillow, he freed himself from all passions and attained arhatship.
Then he went to the city of Rajagrha where Kasyapa and the 
five hundred arhats had also arrived. At that time, Ajatasatru, son 
of Vaidehi, on hearing that Kasyapa and five hundred arhats were 
coming, decorated the road and prepared different kinds of offerings to welcome Mahakasyapa.
King Ajatasatru had formerly achieved the rootless faith caused 
by the Buddha; for when he saw the Buddha coming to him, he 
prostrated himself from a lofty storied house; but the Buddha took 
hold of him by his supernatural powers. This time, while he 
was riding on an elephant, he also prostrated himself at the sight 
of Mahakasyapa; and Mahakasyapa also took hold of him by 
his supernatural powers. Kasyapa said to King Ajatasatru, “The 
Tathagata could utilize his supernatural powers without a preliminary thought, but a sravaka must premeditate before he can 
utilize his supernatural powers. If you prostrate [from such a 
height] without my being prepared, you might lose your life. From 
now on never do it again.” The king said in reply, “I shall do as you 
say.”
King Ajatasatru worshipped at Kasyapa’s feet and said to him 
with his hands joined together, “Most Virtuous One, when the 
World-honored One entered nirvana, I did not see him. If you, Most 
Virtuous One, intend to enter nirvana, you must come to see me.” 
Kasyapa answered, “Let it be so.” And he also said to the great 
king, “We wish to collect the Buddha-dharma in this city.” The king 
said in reply, “From now on till the end of my life, I shall offer robes, 
food and drink, medicine, and bedding to the Sangha. The monks 
may stay at Bamboo Grove Monastery.” Then Kasyapa reflected, 
“This monastery is broad and big and the [resident] bhiksus might 
cause a disturbance to our function. I should say that it might be 
good and might not be good. There is a grotto by the name of 
Pippalayana. We should go there to collect the Dharma-pitaka.”
Then Kasyapa and the five hundred arhats went together to 
Pippalayana Grotto. After arriving there, and having properly 
arranged their lodgings, he said to the bhiksus, “In the future the
bhiksus may lose their correct minds. We should work together to 
collect the Udana and Gdtha before midday, and after midday we 
shall collect the other Dharmas.”
Then the five hundred arhats took their seats according to 
order, and on each seat was spread a nisidana (mat for sitting).
All the monks thought in their minds which of the three 
pitakas they should collect first. Mahakasyapa said, ‘W e should 
first collect the Sutras.” The monks said again, ‘Who can recite the 
Sutras?” Kasyapa said in reply, “The Elder Ananda is the foremost 
among the well-instructed disciples. All the Sutras were received 
i5ic and retained by him. We should ask him to recite the Sutras.” 
Kasyapa then said to Ananda, “You should now recite the Sutras; 
and we, the assembly, shall collect them together.” And he uttered 
the following stanza:
You, Elder Ananda, should know 
That this Dharma-pitaka
Was created by the Tathagata,
And that it subsists through your effort.
You uphold the Buddha’s Dharma-pifa&a,
Like a bull carrying a heavy burden.
The Tathagata, possessing the ten powers,
Is the peerless and great brave one.
He could put an end to the three realms of being;
And the Buddha-dharma is as fine as clarified butter.
All persons who upheld the Dharma-pita&a 
Have already entered nirvana.
You are now the only person
Who has retained the Buddha’s Dharma-pzto&a.
At that time, the Elder Ananda said in reply, “Let it be so.” Then 
he rose from his seat, and standing before the presiding Elder and 
looking at all the monks, he uttered the following stanza:
In this auspicious assembly of monks,
The World-honored One alone is absent.
The mind of purity is unadorned,
Like the sky without the moon.
The Elder Ananda worshipped the monks one by one, beginning 
with the presiding Elder. After worshipping them, he ascended the 
high seat and thought, “Some Sutras I heard personally from the 
Buddha and some I did not. But now I shall say, ‘Thus have I heard’ 
to all of them.” The most virtuous Kasyapa said to Ananda, “Elder, 
you should tell us where the Sutras were spoken.” And he uttered 
the following stanza:
All the great wise ones request 
You, a son of the Buddha, to tell us 
At which place the Buddha’s 
First Sutra was spoken.
Ananda answered, saying, “He spoke the first Sutra for the five 
bhiksus in the country of Varanasi. Thus have I heard: Once the 
World-honored One was staying at the Deer Park of the recluses in 
the country of Varanasi. The Buddha told the bhiksus about the 
noble truth of suffering, and so on.” Such as this was extensively 
related.
At that time, the Elder Ajnatakaundinya reflected, “Among 
this assembly I am the [only] person who heard this Sutra spoken to 
me and my companions. The Buddha-dharma that has been transmitted uninterruptedly is the Dharma I heard at the beginning.” 
Thus a sad and regretful feeling arose in him, and upon seeing this 
sight Ananda also felt sad and regretful. He came down from the 
high seat, sat on the ground, and uttered the following stanza:
The three realms of beings are powerless,
Like the moon’s reflection in the water,
Or illusion, or the trunk of a banana tree.
But with the power of wisdom,
One may know everything in the world.
Thus one should forsake birth and death 
And try to realize nirvana,
Like a tree falling in a gale.
At that time, all five hundred arhats left their seats and sat 
on the bare ground. Kasyapa said to the bhiksus, “How is the
Sutra recited by Ananda?” Then the five hundred arhats entered 
samadhi, and after emerging from samadhi, they said, “Such is 
the Sutra! Such is the Sutra!”
Then the four divisions of the Sutras were extensively recited, 
and after the collection of Sutras was completed, the monks said, 
“Now we wish to collect the Vinaya-pitaka, but whom shall we ask 
to help us do so?”
The most virtuous Kasyapa said in reply, “The Elder Upali is 
foremost in observing the disciplinary rules. We shall ask him to 
collect the Vinaya as we wish.” Then Kasyapa said to Upali, “Elder, 
you should recite the Vinaya, as we wish to collect it.” “Let it be so,” 
was the reply. “Where did the Buddha speak about the pdrdjikas?” 
Upali said in reply, “In the country of Vrji.” “To whom were they 
spoken?” “To Sudinna Kalandakaputra.” Such things as this were 
extensively related.
After the collection of the second Dh axma-pitaka was completed, Mahakasyapa again thought, “We ourselves should recite 
the Mother of Wisdom [i.e., the Abhidharma-pita&a].” Kasyapa 
then said to the bhiksus, “What are [the subjects of] the Mother of 
Wisdom? They are the four objects of meditation, the four right 
efforts, the four supernatural powers, the five sense organs, the five 
spiritual powers, the seven branches of enlightenment, the eightfold right path, the four unhindered wisdoms of eloquence, the 
wisdom of non-disputation, and the wisdom of vows, which should 
all be collected. The Dharmakaya, the theory of discipline, calmness and tranquillity, and doctrinal views are teachings of the 
Mother of Wisdom.” Thus the most virtuous Kasyapa concluded 
the collection of the Dharma-p ita&a. And he uttered the following 
stanza:
We have collected the Dharma, the Sutras,
For the benefit of the world.
The things said by the Buddha of the ten powers 
Were immeasurable.
The darkness of ignorance in the world 
Can be dispelled by the lamp of the Dharma.
At that time, the Elder Ananda thought, “When the Buddha, the 
World-honored One, was about to enter nirvana, he said to those 
who had violated minor rules that [these rules] might be given up. 
I should now tell the monks.” Then before the presiding elder he 
said with hands joined palm to palm, “I personally heard the 
Buddha saying that thenceforward if anyone violated the minor 
rules, he might give them up and not pretend to observe them. If 
the monks agree, we may give them up together. When there are 
no more minor offenses, all the monks may live in peace and 
happiness.”
Then the most virtuous Kasyapa said to Ananda, “Did you ask 
the World-honored One which are minor rules that might be given 
up and which are not minor rules that might not be given up? 
Among the five sections [of the disciplinary rules], do they belong 
152b to the fifth or the fourth section?” Ananda said in reply, “I really 
did not ask. Why? Because all the great bhiksus in the presence of 
the Buddha did not ask about it, and as I was the youngest person, 
and had nothing to feel guilty or shameful about in my mind, I did 
not ask about it. Moreover, as the Buddha was about to enter 
nirvana, I was feeling sad and sorry, and thus I did not ask about 
it.” Mahakasyapa then said to Ananda, “You are guilty of a duskrta
offense, as you offered muddy water to the Buddha when the 
Tathagata asked for water from you at the time of his approaching 
nirvana.” Ananda said in reply, “I was the youngest person and 
had nothing to feel guilty or shameful about in my mind. At that 
time five hundred carts had just crossed the Krakustha River. I 
fetched the water shortly after the carts had gone away, and thus 
the water was muddy.” Kasyapa said again, “When the Tathagata 
needed water, why did you not hold the bowl toward heaven, so 
that heavenly beings would have certainly poured water into it? 
Why did you fetch muddy water to offer to the Buddha? Therefore 
you have committed a duskrta offense. Again, the World-honored 
One had a new robe, as yellow as gold in color. Why did you tread 
on it with your feet?” Ananda said in reply, “I did not do so out of 
shamelessness, but because nobody else was there [to help me]. 
Thus I stepped on it with my foot.” Kasyapa said again, ‘W hy did
you not hold the robe toward heaven? Heavenly beings would 
have come to hold it. Therefore you have committed a duskrta
offense. Again, at that time the Buddha said to you that if a 
man had cultivated the four supernatural powers, he could live 
for a kalpa or less than a kalpa, and he let you know that the 
Buddha, the Tathàgata, had already achieved the four supernatural powers. Why did you not ask the Buddha to stay in the 
world for a kalpa or less than a kalpa?” Ananda said in reply, “Most 
Virtuous Kàsyapa, I was not shameless. At that time the king of 
Maras bewitched my mind, and thus I failed to ask the Tathàgata 
to stay.” Kàsyapa said, “That is also a duskrta offense, Again, why 
did you show the Tathàgata’s physical mark of a well-retracted 
male organ to women?” Ananda said in reply, “It was not out of 
shamelessness that I showed the physical mark of a well-retracted 
male organ to women. At that time the women were full of lustful 
desire, and if they saw the Tathàgata’s physical mark of a wellretracted male organ, they would feel disgusted with their female 
form and wish to gain the male form. That is why I showed it to 
them.” Kàsyapa said, “You have committed a duskrta offense for 
which you should make a confession.”
At that time, Kàsyapa said to the bhiksus, “We should now 
recite the seven rules for settling disputes and other minor offenses.” 
Among the bhiksus some said that the [hundred] regulations to be 
learned by the monks and nuns were minor rules; others said that 
the four dharmas [concerning public confession] were minor rules; 
some others said that the ninety rules [about atonement] were 
minor rules; still others said that the thirty rules [concerning 
confiscation and expiation] were minor rules; and some others 
even said that the two rules concerning uncertain cases of infringement were minor rules. Some of them said, “If only the four grave 
prohibitions and the thirteen rules [concerning temporary expulsion] were reserved while all the other rules were abandoned, the 
heretics would say that the Dharma of the sramana Gautama is 
i52c motley and variegated. When the Buddha was in the world, the 
Dharma was harmonious and in unison, and when he passed away, 
the Dharma also disappeared. After the Buddha’s nirvana, all
his disciples acted on their own discretion; those who wished to 
observe the rules observed the rules, and those who wished to 
abandon the rules abandoned the rules.”
The Buddha said these words, “If a bhiksu cannot observe the 
disciplinary rules with a whole mind, he should observe them with 
a right mind. If he has received the disciplinary rules, he should 
not abandon them but should accept and observe all that the 
Buddha has spoken. If a bhiksu accepts and observes what was 
spoken, the good Dharma will increase without retrogression.” 
Therefore all the disciplinary rules spoken by the Buddha were 
accepted and observed.
Chapter VII
The Causes of the Transmission
of the Dharma-pitaka
by the Five Disciples of the Buddha
The World-honored One transmitted the Dharma-pitaka to Mahakasyapa and entered nirvana; Mahakasyapa transmitted it 
toAnanda and entered nirvana; Ananda transmitted it to
Madhyantika and entered nirvana; Madhyantika transmitted it /_ _ /_ 
to Sanakavasin and entered nirvana; Sanakavasin transmitted
it to Upagupta and entered nirvana; and Upagupta transmitted it
to Dhltika.
When Upagupta was edifying his disciples in the country of 
Mathura, each of them was asked, at the time of becoming an 
arhat, to throw a chip four inches in length into a cave twelve 
cubits broad and eighteen cubits long. [Upagupta] made a vow that 
when the cave was filled with chips he would enter nirvana; 
and when the cave was full of chips, he did enter nirvana, after 
having handed over the Dharma to his disciple Dhltika, who 
was the last disciple to throw a chip into the cave to make it 
full. Upagupta said to Dhitika, “Formerly the Buddha handed 
over the Dharma-pitaka to Mahakasyapa, Mahakasyapa handed it 
over to Ananda, Ananda handed it over to Madhyantika, and 
Madhyantika handed it over to my upadhyaya. Now I hand this 
Dharma-pitaka over to you.” Having handed down the Dharmapitaka, he entered nirvana seven days later. Both heavenly and 
human beings passed the news from place to place throughout 
Jambudvipa. One hundred thousand arhats came harmoniously 
together to make offerings, and the number of learners and 
i53a upasakas and upasikas was uncountable. At the time of entering 
nirvana, [Upagupta] rose into the air in the postures of walking,
standing, sitting, and lying down, with water coming out of the 
upper part of his body and fire from the lower part in eighteen 
transformations. All the heavenly beings and people in the world 
were delighted. Then he performed jhapita (cremation) of himself 
with the chips [from the cave]. At that time one thousand arhats 
entered nirvana with him. Then Dhltika received and protected 
the Dharma-pitaka.
The Causes of Kasyapa
The causes of the nirvana of the Elder Mahakasyapa: At that 
time the Elder Kasyapa had all the Sutras, the Vinaya, and the 
Abhidharma recited. With the wisdom of vows he understood 
the Tnpitaka, achieved the body [for his own enjoyment], and 
realized the samadhi of cessation. With the all-comprehensive 
four unhindered wisdoms of eloquence, he collected the Dharmapitaka with five hundred arhats. The Dharma as spoken by the 
Buddha was handed down to various superior persons one by 
one, so that it might spread to all places for constant reading 
and reciting and not be lost, for the benefit of all people. He 
often thought, “I am getting advanced in age, but old age and 
death are the law of impermanence.” He also thought in this 
way: “I have received according to my ability what the Buddha 
has spoken. My good friends have received the Sutras, and thus 
the sons of the Dharma have been bom. What I have done at 
present for requiting the Buddha’s kindness is only a small 
repayment for the Buddha’s favors. Who can fully repay all 
the kindness of the Buddha? All my fellow students are harmonious in the Dharma, and I have been carrying myself too long 
to receive and gather up the world. I am too tired from carrying 
myself for so long, and as this stinking body is extremely tired, my 
time of nirvana is approaching.” He also uttered the following 
stanza:
We have collected the Sutras
And have paved the Way.
We should widely teach the World-honored One’s Dharma 
words
In all places.
He also uttered the following stanza:
The shameless ones are expelled;
Those having a sense of shame are accepted.
I have done what is beneficial to me.
My time of nirvana is coming.
Mahakasyapa then went to Ananda and said to him, “The Worldhonored One handed over the Dharma-pitaka to me and then 
entered nirvana. Now I wish to enter nirvana and hand over the 
Dharma-pitaka to you. You should accept and uphold it. In due 
time a son will be bom to a merchant in the city of Rajagrha, and 
as the child will be born covered with a sana (hempen) garment, 
he will be called Sanakavasin. Sanakavasin will sail on the great 
sea, and later he will have faith in the Dharma of the Worldhonored One, to whom he will always make offerings. You should 
edify him to become a monk and transmit the Buddha’s Dharmapitaka to him.”
Mahakasyapa then handed over the Buddha’s Dharma-pitaka
to the Elder Ananda. After having handed over the Dharmapitaka, he thought in this way: “My World-honored One had great 
153b compassion. He did what was hard to do, and his edification was 
all-round and pervasive. By his countless merits he created his 
most recent body. The relics of the World-honored One are worshipped at all places. I should enter nirvana, and you ought to 
know that there is nothing else for me to do.” He also uttered the 
following stanza:
It was my World-honored One
Who had great compassion.
To the relics of the World-honored One
I have already made offerings.
It was from him
That the samadhi of enlightenment was bom.
To the one who did what was hard to do 
This is my last offering.
Mahakasyapa went by his supernatural powers to the four caityas
(shrines) at the places where the Buddha was born, where he attained enlightenment, where he turned the Wheel of the Dharma, 
and where he entered nirvana. With utmost veneration he worshipped and made offerings to them. He did the same at the eight 
relic stupas. He also entered the Naga palace to make offerings [to 
the Buddha’s tooth relic], like a lion king entering a lake that 
was terrorless, deep, large, unruffled, pure, and undefiled. After 
having made offerings to the Buddha’s tooth relic there, he came 
out as quickly as the Naga king could appear in the air and 
instantly reached the palace of the Trayastrimsa heaven, where 
Sakra and the other heavenly beings were glad to make offerings 
to him. After having received the offerings, he intended to enter 
nirvana at that place. Upon seeing the signs of the matter, Sakra 
said to Kasyapa, “As you are mindful of pure practices, you have 
always lived in the mountains. What is your intention in coming 
here? This is a lonely place where you have nobody to depend 
upon.”
At that time, the Elder Mahakasyapa said to Sakra, “Kausika, 
I take pleasure in looking at the Buddha’s tooth relic and the 
Buddha’s heavenly crown as well as his mani (pearl), pdtra (alms 
bowl), and other things. This is my last time to make offerings to 
them.” He also uttered the following stanza:
To say that my suffering is ended,
I have come here.
To see the signs of the Buddha,
I have come here.
Sakra and the other heavenly beings, hearing Kasyapa’s words, 
felt sad and sorry, and out of respect for him they handed the 
Buddha’s tooth relic with both hands to Kas'yapa, who received 
it respectfully and looked at it without blinking. He offered 
mandarava flowers, bakula flowers, and small particles of ox head 
sandalwood to the tooth relic. Mahakasyapa said to Sakra and one
thousand heavenly beings, “You should practice non-slackness.” 
Then Mahakasyapa suddenly disappeared from the summit of 
Mount Sumeru and returned to the city of Rajagrha.
At that time, the Elder Kasyapa handed over the Buddha’s 
Dharma-pifo&a to Ananda, and then Ananda followed behind 
Kasyapa every day. Ananda said to Kasyapa, “Do not enter nirvana!” 
Kasyapa then told Ananda, “You and I may enter [the city] each 
by his own way.”
i 53c Ananda rose early in the morning, and having dressed himself in his robes he took up his begging bowl and entered the 
city to beg for food. Ananda was harmonious with others in three 
delightful ways: first, delightful name; second, delightful listening; third, delightful appearance. People were never tired of looking at him and never tired of listening to him speaking on the 
Dharma.
Kasyapa also rose early in the morning, and having dressed 
himself in his robes, he held his begging bowl and entered the city 
to beg for food. He thought, “I promised that at the time of entering 
nirvana, I would go to see King Ajatasatru.” Kasyapa then went to 
the royal palace and said to the gatekeeper, “I am here, wishing to 
see the great king. You may go into the palace to inform the king 
about it.” The gatekeeper said in reply, “The king is now sleeping. 
I shall inform him after he has awakened.” Kasyapa said, ‘You 
may wake up the king.” The gatekeeper said in reply, “The king 
must not be woken up. If he is awakened, he will be greatly 
enraged; and once he is enraged he will punish me.” The Elder 
Kasyapa said to the gatekeeper, “When the king has been awakened, you should inform him that Kasyapa has come here, wishing 
to enter nirvana. That is why I want to see the king.”
Then Kasyapa went into the city to beg for food. After having 
begged for food, he went to Kukkuta Mountain, which broke into 
three portions. On the mountain he spread some grass on the 
ground and pondered, while saying to his own body, “Formerly the 
Tathagata covered you with a robe made of cast-off rags. You 
should stay till the time of the Dharma-pito&a of Maitreya.” He 
also uttered the following stanza:
With my supernatural powers,
I shall keep this body,
Covered with this robe of cast-off rags,
Till the emergence of Maitreya Buddha.
That Buddha, using this body,
May edify his disciples.
At that time Kasyapa contemplated on three matters. First, after 
entering nirvana his body should be dressed in his robe of cast-off 
rags and buried under the three portions of the mountain, like a 
child in his mother’s womb, without being lost or injured, and 
be kept till the time of the Dharma-pitaAa of Maitreya. Second, 
if Ring Ajatas'atru comes, the mountain should open. Kasyapa 
thought, “If King Ajatasatru could not see my body, he would vomit 
hot blood and die.” Third, if Ananda comes, the mountain should 
open. When he emerged from his contemplation, he forsook his 
life and entered nirvana. After his nirvana, the earth quaked in 
six ways. Sakra and innumerable heavenly beings presented 
various heavenly flowers as offerings to the body of Kasyapa. The 
three portions of the mountain closed together to bury his body. 
As Sakra and the other heavenly beings were separated [from 
Kasyapa], they felt sad and regretful, and uttered the following 
stanza:
We are today
From Kasyapa far away.
Sad and sorry are our minds,
So much that it is unbearable.
In the Pippalayana Grotto 
All rare Dharmas had arisen.
The people of Magadha 
Were bom poor and forlorn.
The whole world has nobody 
To depend upon.
Now this Kasyapa,
The second Buddha, is extinct.
The right Dharma has collapsed like a landslide;
The ship of the right Dharma is tossing;
The tree of the right Dharma has withered;
The sea of the right Dharma is turbulent;
To the delight of the king of Maras,
Who enjoys this disaster of the Dharma.
After having said this, they suddenly disappeared.
When Ananda was in the city of Rajagrha and had not yet 
come out, Kasyapa entered nirvana. The Elder Ananda, having 
begged for food in the city of Rajagrha, meditated on impermanence, while King Ajatasatru dreamed that his maternal clan 
had perished. He was startled by the dream and awoke in terror. 
The gatekeeper reported to the king, saying, “Kasyapa has been 
here, wishing to see the king. He was going to enter nirvana.” 
Upon hearing these words, the king fainted and fell to the ground. 
His attendants sprinkled water on him, and when he was recovered a little he went to the Bamboo Grove, where he worshipped 
at Ananda’s feet. After worshipping him, he stood up and wept sorrowfully, saying, “I have just heard that the Elder Mahakas'yapa 
has entered nirvana.” Ananda said in reply, “The Great Strenuous 
One has entered nirvana.”
At that time, King Ajatasatru said to Ananda, “Let me see 
Kasyapa’s body; I wish to make offerings to it.” Ananda then took 
the king to Kukkuta Mountain. Ananda saw that many Raksasas 
(demons) were guarding the body of Kasyapa. King Ajatasatru saw 
the same, and he also saw that Kasyapa’s body was covered with 
heavenly flowers. Having seen this sight, he raised his hands to 
pat his own head and prostrated himself at full length, like a tree 
pushed down by an elephant, to worship at the feet of the body. 
After worshipping the body, he wished to get some firewood to 
cremate it. At that moment, Ananda said, “Great King, what do 
you wish to do?” The king replied, “I wish to burn the body of 
Kasyapa.” Ananda said in reply, “Do not bum it! Do not burn it! 
This body is preserved by divine power. When Maitreya Buddha 
attains supreme enlightenment, he will come here, surrounded by 
ninety-six crores of disciples, to take Kasyapa’s body and show
it to them. Maitreya will say, ‘This Kasyapa was a disciple of 
Sakyamuni. He was the foremost in contentment, with few desires, 
and he also collected the Dharma-pfta&a of Sakyamuni.’ Then he 
will utter the following stanza:
This recluse bhiksu surnamed Kasyapa,
A great disciple of Sakyamuni Buddha,
Whose supreme good views benefitted the world,
Accepted and upheld the Bhavma-pitaka of that Buddha.
“Maitreya’s disciples will think, ‘In those days, the human body was 
so small! Was the body of Sakyamuni the same as this or larger?’ 
When Maitreya Buddha sees his disciples, he will say to them, 
‘The samghati robe made of cast-off rags in which Mahakasyapa’s 
body is wrapped was the samghati robe of Sakyamuni, the Worldhonored One.’ Upon hearing this, his disciples will feel sorry and 
i54b disappointed, and thus his ninety-six crores of disciples will attain 
arhatship. They will also achieve the merits derived from the 
observance of disciplinary rules and moral conduct. They will then 
build a stupa on top of the mountain.”
King Ajatasatru returned to his city, and the three portions of 
the mountain closed together and covered the body again. King 
Ajatasatru built a stupa to which he offered different kinds of 
incense and flowers.
The Causes of Ananda
When the Elder Kasyapa had entered nirvana, King Ajatasatru
worshipped at Ananda’s feet and said, “Elder, when the Buddha
entered nirvana, I did not see him, and when the Elder Mahakasyapa entered nirvana, I did not see him either. If you, Elder,
wish to enter nirvana, I hope you will come to see me.” Ananda said
in reply, “Let it be so.” / _
Now Sanakavasin, the lord of merchants, returned from overseas. After storing away his treasures in his house, he went to the 
Bamboo Grove. The Elder Ananda was then standing at the door
of the preaching hall. Sanakavasin went up to Ananda, worshipped at his feet, and sat to the side. Sanakavasin then said to 
Ananda, “Elder, may it be known to you that I have returned safely 
from overseas and wish to hold the quinquennial assembly in order 
to earn merit from the Buddha and all the monks. Where is the 
Buddha now?” Ananda said in reply, “The World-honored One 
has entered nirvana.” Upon hearing this, Sanakavasin fainted 
and fell to the ground, but when his attendants sprinkled water 
on him he soon regained his senses. Then he said, “Where did 
the Elder Sariputra enter nirvana?” And he also inquired where 
Mahamaudgalyayana, Mahakasyapa, and some others entered 
nirvana. After making the inquiries, he said again, “Elder, I wish 
to hold the quinquennial assembly in order to gain merit.” Ananda 
said, “You may do so as you wish.” And he did so, as has been 
extensively related.
After the conclusion of the great assembly, Ananda said to him, 
“Now you have completed the quinquennial assembly in order to 
gain merit from the Dharma-pita&a of the World-honored One. 
Today you should absorb and accept the Dharma.” Sanakavasin 
said in reply, “Elder, what will you teach me?” At that time, 
Ananda said to Sanakavasin, ‘You should become a monk in the 
Dharma-pitaka of the Buddha.” Sanakavasin said in reply, “Let it 
be so.” Then the Elder Ananda made him a monk and ordained 
him, [binding him] to observe the complete moral precepts through 
the performance of the ceremony of making one announcement 
with three responses, all perfectly performed. Sanakavasin also 
made a great vow, saying, “I shall always wear this sana garment 
till my death.”
The Elder Ananda received and retained eighty-four thousand Dharma teachings, all that the Buddha and the arhats had 
spoken. Sanakavasin also received and retained them all. He 
completely possessed the three clear insights and was well-versed 
in the Tripitaka.
At that time, the Elder Ananda was residing at the Bamboo 
154c Grove, and there was then a bhiksu who recited a stanza in the 
following way:
A man lives up to a hundred years 
Without seeing a heron.
Another man lives for only one day,
But he has seen a heron.
This man has much more wisdom and fame 
Than the one of a hundred years.
At that time, Ananda was walking nearby and heard the bhiksu’s
recitation. He said to him, “The stanza you are reciting was not 
spoken by the Buddha. You should say, ‘If one man lives for a 
hundred years without perceiving the rise and fall of things, and 
if another lives for only one day but perceives the rise and fall of 
things, this [second] man possesses much more wisdom than the 
one who lives a hundred years.’ Moreover, there are two kinds of 
people who slander the Buddha. One kind of people are infidels 
who slander the Buddha out of hatred and resentment. The other 
kind, though believers, do not properly accept and understand the 
meanings of the Sutras and are also considered slanderers of the 
Buddha. Just as a man with no feet and no mouth is useless, these 
two kinds of people are useless, as they cannot understand the 
proper meanings of the words jati (rebirth) and aristaka (heron) 
mentioned in the Sutra.” And he also uttered the following stanza:
An ignorant man has no wisdom;
His actions are useless.
If a wise man does not accept the Dharma,
His wisdom is like poison.
By hearing the recitation of right knowledge,
One may gain the fruit of liberation.
The bhiksu who recited the stanza returned to the place of his 
teacher and said, “Ananda said, ‘The World-honored One spoke 
thus: “If one man lives for a hundred years without perceiving the 
rise and fall of things, and if another lives for only one day and 
perceives the rise and fall of things, the second man is much better 
than the one who lives a hundred years.” The teacher said to his 
disciples, “Ananda is getting old. His memory has become poor.” 
And he also uttered the following stanza:
If a man reaches senility,
He loses his power of memory.
His wisdom and vigor 
Also grow old.
He also said to his disciple, “Recite as you do. Do not follow his 
words.”
When Ananda went again to that place, he heard [the bhiksu]
reciting the same stanza. The Elder Ananda said to him, “I have 
told you, this was not spoken by the Buddha.” He answered 
Ananda, saying, “My teacher said that Ananda was getting old and 
that his memory had become poor.” Ananda reflected and wished 
to go to the teacher to tell him the meaning. Then he considered 
the mind of the teacher: Would he accept his words? He saw in his 
mind that the teacher would not accept the meaning. He thought 
again: Was there any other bhiksu who could tell the teacher? And 
he saw that nobody could tell him. Ananda considered the matter, 
“If the Buddha were in the world, I would report the matter to him 
and to Sariputra, Maudgalyayana, Kasyapa, and others. But the 
Buddha and all the others have entered nirvana. I also wish to 
enter nirvana. By the power of the Buddha, the Dharma will abide 
for one thousand years.” He also uttered the following stanza:
Recluses such as they 
Have all passed away.
Now between them and me,
No distinctive mark will there be.
I am now thinking of myself 
As a bird wafting in the wind.
They have entered nirvana,
Having cleared all impurities and bonds.
They were lamps in the world
That dispelled the darkness of ignorance.
Of those great energetic ones
Who observed numerous rules and ceremonies,
I am the only one surviving,
Like one tree remaining in a forest.
Then Ananda enjoined Sanakavasin, saying, “The World-honored 
One, after having transmitted the Dharma-pfta&a to Mahakasyapa, 
entered nirvana; and Mahakasyapa, after having transmitted it to 
me, entered nirvana. Now I wish to enter nirvana, and you should 
accept and guard this Dharma-pifo&a of the Buddha.
In the country of Mathura there is a mountain named Urumanda. In the country of Mathura there is a wealthy person who 
has two sons named Nata and Bhata, whom the Buddha predicted 
would construct a monastery on that mountain. Again, in the 
country of Mathura there is a perfumer named Gupta who will 
have a son named Upagupta. You should edify him to become a 
homeless monk. He will be a Buddha without the characteristic 
marks of a Buddha, as was predicted by the World-honored One, 
who said, ‘A hundred years after my nirvana, he will perform the 
functions of a Buddha.’” Sanakavasin said in reply, “Let it be so.” 
Having transmitted the Dharma-pfta&a to Sanakavasin, the 
Elder Ananda rose early in the morning, dressed himself in his 
robes, and went to the city of Rajagrha to collect alms of food. He 
thought, “I promised that at the time of entering nirvana I should 
go to see King Ajatasatru.” Ananda then went to the royal palace 
and said to the gatekeeper, “I am here wishing to see the great 
king. You may go into the palace to inform the king about it.” The 
gatekeeper said in reply, “The king is now sleeping. I shall inform 
him after he has awakened.” Ananda said, ‘You may wake up the 
king.” The gatekeeper said in reply, “The king must not be woken 
up. If he is awakened, he will be greatly enraged; and once he is 
enraged, he will punish me.” The Elder Ananda said to the gatekeeper, When the king has awakened, you should inform him that 
Ananda wishes to enter nirvana. That is why I have come to see 
the king.”
Ananda then went into the city to collect alms. After having 
collected alms, he reflected, “If I enter nirvana at this place, King 
Ajatasatru will not give a portion of my remains to the people of 
155b Vaisali; and thus the people of Vaisali will certainly bear a grudge 
against King Ajatasatru. If I enter nirvana in the country of 
Vaisali, the people of Vaisali will certainly not give a portion of my
remains to King Ajatasatru; and thus King Ajatasatru will also 
certainly bear a grudge against the people of Vaisali. Therefore, I 
shall enter nirvana in the middle of the Ganges.” Then the Elder 
Ananda went to the Ganges.
Meanwhile, in his sleep King Ajatasatru dreamed that the 
handle of his canopy was broken, but the canopy did not fall down. 
He was startled by the dream and woke in fear. The gatekeeper 
reported to the king, saying, “Ananda has been here, wishing to 
see Your Majesty. He is going to enter nirvana.” Upon hearing 
these words, the king fainted and collapsed onto the ground. His 
attendants sprinkled water on him to wake him from unconsciousness. When he had just recovered a little consciousness, he 
thought, “Where will the Elder Ananda enter nirvana?”
At that moment, a divine being in the grove said to King 
Ajatasatru, “The Elder Ananda, a prince of the Buddha-dharma, 
protected the Dharma-pitaka and with a mind of resolve has 
brought his existence in the triple world to an end. With a quiet 
and tranquil mind he has gone to the country of Vaisali to enter 
nirvana.” King Ajatasatru then assembled his four divisions of 
troops—elephants, horses, chariots, and footmen—and proceeded 
to the bank of the Ganges.
In the country of Vaisali there was also a divine being, who 
uttered the following stanza to the people of Vaisali:
This recluse Ananda
Has dispelled the darkness of ignorance.
To all the multitude of the world 
He shows equally the mind of compassion.
He has come to the country of Vaisali 
With the intention of entering nirvana.
Then the Licchavis of Vaisali also assembled their four divisions of 
troops—elephants, horses, chariots, and footmen—and proceeded 
to the bank of the Ganges. At that moment, Ananda was sailing in 
a boat to the middle of the Ganges, when King Ajatasatru arrived 
and saluted Ananda, uttering the following stanza with his hands 
joined palm to palm:
The son of the Buddha enters nirvana
With a mind of equality toward the triple world.
The Buddha whose face resembled a lotus flower 
Has already entered nirvana.
You are the one under whom we take refuge.
You should never leave us or abandon us.
At that time, the people of Vaisali worshipped at Ananda’s feet and 
said to him, At this place you are remembered by men and 
heavenly beings, but now you wish to realize extinction. In this 
world Gautama was the supreme one with perfect wisdom and 
with eyes resembling lotus flowers. For the benefit of the forlorn 
and solitary, you should embrace the world.”
The Elder Ananda thought in this way, “If I enter the country 
of Magadha, the people of Vaisali will be vexed and annoyed. But 
if I enter the country of Vaisali, the king of Magadha will be vexed 
and annoyed. Today I must think over what is appropriate for me 
to do.” Knowing that it was the proper time, he uttered the 
following stanza:
May half of the merit of the Dharma 
Be given to the king of Magadha; 
i55c The other half of the merit,
To the masses of Vaisali.
Thus the two peoples 
May make offerings properly.
When the Elder Ananda was about to enter nirvana, the earth 
quaked in six ways. There was then a recluse possessing the 
five supernatural powers who was living in the Snow Mountains 
with five hundred disciples. The recluse wondered why the earth 
quaked, and then he perceived that Ananda was about to enter 
nirvana. Thus he went with his five hundred disciples to Ananda, 
and upon arriving there he worshipped at bis feet and said with 
his hands joined palm to palm, “I shall obtain from the Elder the 
Dharma as spoken by the Buddha and become a fully ordained 
monk to lead a pure life of celibacy.”
Then a conception arose in the mind of the Elder Ananda, All 
my disciples should come.” When he had this idea in his mind, all 
of his five hundred disciples, being arhats, came together to the 
assembly. The Elder Ananda rotated this earth with his supernatural powers, and the recluse with his five hundred disciples 
became fully ordained monks. At the first karman (act of the 
ordination ceremony), the recluse and his five hundred disciples 
attained the fruition of srota-apannas (those who have entered 
the stream of holy living); at the second karman they attained 
the fruition of sakrdagamins (those who will be reborn only 
once more); at the third karman they attained the fruition of 
anagamins (those who do not return); and at the fourth karman
they attained the fruition of arhatship, free from all afflictions. As 
the recluse and his disciples became monks in the middle of the 
Ganges, he was named Madhyantika.
After having done what he wished to do, Madhyantika 
worshipped at Ananda’s feet and said these words, “Just as the 
World-honored One converted Subhadra as his last disciple, and 
Subhadra entered nirvana before him, you, being my upadhyaya,
should also allow me to enter nirvana before you, as I do not wish 
to see my teacher entering nirvana.” The Elder Ananda said to 
Madhyantika, “The World-honored One transmitted the Dharmapitaka to Mahakasyapa and entered nirvana; and Mahakasyapa 
transmitted it to me and entered nirvana. Now I wish to enter 
nirvana and you should receive and maintain the Dharma-pito&a. 
The Buddha has said, ‘The country of Kasmira is the best place for 
a monastery of meditation. One hundred years after my nirvana 
there will be a bhiksu by the name of Madhyantika who will uphold 
the DYi&rma-pitaka in the country of Kasmira. Therefore you 
should take the Dharma-pitaka to that country.” Madhyantika 
said in reply, “Let it be so.”
Having transmitted the Dharma -pitaka to Madhyantika, the 
Elder Ananda manifested his supernatural powers and made 
eighteen transformations, walking, standing, sitting, lying down 
in midair, and entering the fire samadhi. After the conclusion of 
the samadhi, his body issued rays of various colors—blue, yellow,
red, and white—with flames coming out of the upper part of his 
body and water flowing from the lower part, or water flowing from 
the upper part and flames coming out of the lower part. At that 
time, the body of Ananda was upright and dignified, like a famous 
mountain out of which pure water flowed and upon which different 
kinds of flowers grew. Ananda reflected that he wished to give half 
i56a of his body to the king of Magadha and the other half to the people 
of Vaisali. Then, with his supernatural powers, he fulfilled this 
wish to be an almsgiver. By the Diamond of Wisdom he cut his 
mountain-like body in two and gave half of it to the kingdom of 
Magadha and the other half to the people of Vaisali.
After Ananda entered nirvana, King Ajatasatru and all the 
heavenly beings venerated one half of his remains, while the 
people of Vaisali venerated the other half. Two stupas were 
erected, one in the city of Rajagrha and one in Vaisali.
The Causes of Madhyantika
When the Elder Ananda had entered nirvana, Madhyantika 
thought, “My teacher instructed me to bring the Buddha’s 
Dharma-pfra&a to the country of Kasmira.” Madhyantika then 
went to the country of Kasmira, where he sat upon a rope couch 
and thought again, “As this country of Kasmira is a possession of 
the Naga king, if I do not subjugate him he will not come into my 
realm. I should enter the samddhi of suchness.” With the power of 
the samddhi of suchness, he caused the country of Kasmira to 
quake in six ways, so much so that the Naga king could not rest. 
Thus the Naga king came to Madhyantika, who then entered the 
samddhi of compassion. The Naga king raised a gale but could not 
stir even a corner of [Madhyantika’s] robe. Then he started a 
thunderstorm, but Madhyantika transformed the thunderstorm 
with his divine power into heavenly blossoms such as utpala (blue 
lotus), kumuda (red lotus), pundarika (white lotus), and other 
flowers, all of which dropped to the ground. He also tried to injure 
Madhyantika with various weapons, which were turned by divine
power into heavenly flowers. He also used a big mountain to press 
onto Madhyantika, and the big mountain became a heavenly 
blossom. Then the following stanza was uttered in the air:
A big wind was blowing,
But it could not stir a corner of his robe.
Thunderstorms and weapons were turned 
Into celestial blossoms,
As snow on a mountain,
Under the light of sunshine,
Is melted altogether 
Without any remnant.
When he entered the samadhi of compassion,
Fire could not burn him;
Weapons and poisonous injuries 
Could never approach him.
Thereupon, the Naga king was frightened, and he then went to 
Madhyantika and said to him, “Holy man, what do you instruct me 
to do?” Madhyantika said, “Give this place to me.” The Naga king 
said in reply, “It is impossible.” Madhyantika said, “It has been 
predicted by the Buddha that a most superior place for meditation 
would be initiated in this land, namely, the country of Kasmlra.” 
The Naga king said again, “Is this predicted by the Buddha?” 
i 56b Madhyantika replied, “It is so.” The Naga king said again, “How 
much land do you wish to have?” Madhyantika said, “I wish to 
have a place as large as a couch.” The Naga king said, “Such I shall 
give.” At that time, Madhyantika enlarged his couch by supernatural power to the size of a kutaru-navaka (new tent) covering 
the great earth. The Naga king said again, “How many people 
will follow you?” Madhyantika said, “There will be five hundred 
arhats.” Again, the Naga king said, “If there is one less than five 
hundred arhats, I shall retake the residential place.” Madhyantika 
wondered whether there would be five hundred arhats in the 
Dharma-pitaka. Then he perceived that there would be no less, nor 
even more, than that number. So he answered the Naga king, 
saying, “Let it be so.”
The Elder said again, “If there are almsreceivers, there must 
be almsgivers. I shall bring white-clothed lay believers to the 
country of Kasmira.” The Naga king said, “Let it be so.”
Madhyantika then brought a large number of white-clothed 
lay believers to the country of Kasmira, where they founded villages and towns. The lay believers said to Madhyantika, “How 
shall we sustain ourselves in this place?” Madhyantika then, by his 
supernatural powers, brought the lay believers to Gandhamadana 
Mountain. After arriving there the lay believers dug kunkuma
(turmeric), which they brought back and planted in Kasmira.
At that time all the Naga kings at Gandhamadana Mountain 
became angry, and Madhyantika converted and subjugated them. 
The Naga kings asked Madhyantika, “How long will the Worldhonored One’s Dharma-pzto&a stay [in the world]?” Madhyantika 
said in reply, “It will last one thousand years.” The Naga kings 
promised that so long as the Buddha-dharma stayed in the world, 
they would allow him to stay in their country. Madhyantika said 
in reply, “Let it be so.”
Madhyantika brought the turmeric back to the country of 
Kasmira and planted it. While the World-honored One’s Dharmapitaka remained, Madhyantika widely spread it and manifested 
various supernatural powers. He studied the Buddha-dharma 
together with the almsgivers, so as to make them understand and 
comprehend its meaning. Then he entered nirvana, like a fire 
extinguished by water, and his body was cremated with ox head 
sandalwood and other fragrant woods. His sarira were collected, 
and a stupa was erected for them.
The Causes of Sanakavasin
When the Elder Ananda had entered nirvana, Sanakavasin went 
to the country of Mathura. On the way there was a monastery 
named Pindavana, in which Sanakavasin spent a night. In the 
monastery there were two old bhiksus, who were discussing a 
stanza:
“Non-violation is the first precept;
The best learning is the selection of the Dharma.”
The bhiksus believed that
* / _ _ .
This was spoken by Sanakavasin.
Sanakavasin said to the two bhiksus, “The idea you uttered was 
not spoken by me. What I said was ‘the harmony of the right 
Dharma.’ Elders, once in the past there was a lord of merchants in 
the country of Varanasi, who intended to sail on the great sea with 
five hundred traders. On the way they met with apratyekabuddha
who was sick. The lord of merchants detained the traders to look 
after tine pratyekabuddha, and he personally attended to him with 
i56c the medicine prescribed by a physician. When tine pratyekabuddha
became a little better, the lord of merchants took out a sana
garment. It had been rough and coarse but was made soft and 
smooth by treatment with washing and dyeing. After bathing the 
pratyekabuddha, he offered the garment to him, saying, ‘Worldhonored One, that garment of yours is rough and coarse. May 
the World-honored One accept mine after taking a bath. The 
pratyekabuddha said in reply, ‘Good man, I am getting old, but I 
became a monk in this sanavasa (hempen garment), and with this 
garment covering my body I gained the holy Dharma. I shall now 
enter nirvana in this same garment.’ The lord of merchants said, 
‘Do not enter nirvana. When I return from the sea, I shall offer to 
you, World-honored One, garments, food, drink, bedding, and 
medicine so long as you do not enter nirvana. I shall now sail on 
the sea and cannot stay here.’ The pratyekabuddha said, ‘Now 
I must enter nirvana. You have done great meritorious deeds, 
for which you should feel happy.’ Then the pratyekabuddha
showed the eighteen transformations to the lord of merchants; 
and after showing the supernatural transformations, he entered 
nirvana.
“The lord of merchants made offerings to the body and made a 
vow, ‘I have performed various meritorious deeds for this bhiksu.
With this good root I shall obtain what I ought to obtain.’ The lord 
of merchants at that time was myself. That is why I have met
with a supreme teacher who caused me to gain the Way. I wore 
this sanavasa when I became a monk in the Dharma-pifa&a of 
the World-honored One. With this sanavasa covering my body, 
I gained the Way, and with this sanavasa covering my body, 
I shall enter nirvana. I have always worn this sanavasa; even 
when I was a lay believer clad in white I also wore this garment. 
That was why I was named Sanakavasin. I received full ordination, and after the completion of the fourth karman I also 
received the greater precepts. Even before entering nirvana, I 
shall always wear this sanavasa. That is why again I am named 
Sanakavasin.”
At that time, the Elder Sanakavasin gradually proceeded to 
the country of Mathura and went to Urumanda Mountain, where 
he sat on a rope couch. On Urumanda Mountain there were two 
Naga kings, who were brothers, followed by five hundred Nagas. 
Sanakavasin reflected, “If I do not subjugate them, I shall not be 
able to edify them.” Thus he shook the mountain with his supernatural powers. Being enraged, the two Naga kings went to the 
place of Sanakavasin, started a strong storm, and set a fire. 
Sanakavasin entered the samadhi of compassion, which could 
keep the storm and fire away from his body, and transformed the 
water and fire into celestial blossoms, namely, utpala, kumuda,
pundarika, and other flowers, which all fell to the ground. The 
Nagas again caused a thunderstorm, which was also transformed 
into celestial blossoms by supernatural powers. They also tried to 
throw various kinds of weapons at Sanakavasin, and these were 
again transformed into celestial blossoms. They tried to press 
i57a Sanakavasin with a big mountain, and he also transformed the 
mountain into a heavenly flower. Then the following stanza was 
uttered in the air:
A strong gale and storm 
Could not hurt him;
Thundering, lightning, and weapons 
Turned into celestial blossoms,
As snow on a mountain,
Under the light of sunshine,
Is melted altogether,
Without any remnant.
When he entered the samadhi of compassion,
Fire could not burn him;
Weapons and poisonous injuries 
Could never approach him.
Then the two Naga kings went to Sanakavasin and said to 
him, “Holy man, what do you instruct us to do?” Sanakavasin 
said in reply, “I wish to build a monastery on this mountain. 
You should listen to me.” The Naga kings said in reply, “It is 
impossible.” The Elder said, “Such has been predicted by the 
World-honored One, who said, ‘A hundred years after my nirvana, 
a monastery with the name Natabhatika shall be constructed 
at the best quiet and calm place on Great Cream Mountain.’ ” The 
Naga kings said again, “Is it predicted by the World-honored 
One?” The Elder said in reply, “It is so.” The Naga kings said, “If 
it has been predicted by the World-honored One, we shall listen 
to you.”
Then the Elder meditated and observed whether the almsgivers of Natabhatika Monastery had been born or not, and he saw 
that they had been born. Sanakavasin rose early in the morning, 
dressed himself in his robes, carried his alms bowl, and went to the 
country of Mathura to collect food. After having collected food, he 
went to the place of the almsgivers Nata and Bhata. Upon arriving 
there, he said to the almsgivers, “Good men, you should give 
me money, as I wish to build a monastery on Cream Mountain.” 
The two brothers Nata and Bhata said to Sanakavasin, “We cannot 
do it.” The Elder said, “The Buddha has predicted that the two 
of you will construct a monastery on Great Cream Mountain. 
The two men said in reply, “If it is predicted by the Buddha, we 
shall construct the monastery.” Then the two of them built a 
monastery on the mountain, fully provided with garments, decorations, and other articles. This monastery was thus named 
Natabhatika.
The Causes of Upagupta
/ _
When Sanakavasin had constructed the monastery on Great 
Cream Mountain, he contemplated whether the perfume dealer 
named Gupta had been born or not, and he saw that he had been 
born. He then contemplated whether [Gupta’s] son Upagupta, who 
would, as the World-honored One had predicted, be a Buddha 
without the characteristic marks of a Buddha and who “will perform the functions of a Buddha one hundred years after my 
nirvana,” had been born or not, and saw that he had not yet been 
born. With his power in expedients, Sanakavasin taught the perfume dealer to be energetic.
One day Sanakavasin went to [the perfume dealer’s] house 
with a large number of disciples; on another day he went to his 
house with only one disciple; and on still another day he went to 
his house alone. Gupta was performing Buddhist functions, and 
when he saw that Sanakavasin came to his house alone, he asked, 
Holy man, why are you alone without any disciple following you?” 
The Elder said, “I am an old man; how can I have anybody 
following me? If somebody is energetic and takes delight in becoming a monk, then I shall have a follower.” Gupta said, “I take 
delight in the enjoyment of the five desires at home, and I cannot 
leave my home to become a monk. But if a son is born to me, he 
will follow the Elder.” The Elder said, “Let it be so! Let it be so! 
Forever keep this promise and never go back on your word.”
A son was then born to Gupta and was named Apagupta. When 
he had grown up, Sanakavasin went to Gupta and said to him, 
“Formerly you promised me, ‘If a son is born to me, I shall give him 
to the Elder. Now a son has been born to you. This son is virtuous. 
You should allow him to follow me to become a monk.” Gupta said, 
Now I have only one son. When the second son is born, I shall give 
him to the Elder.” Then Sanakavasin pondered whether this child 
was Upagupta or not, and he saw that he was not. So he said to 
Gupta, “Let it be so.”
When the second son was born, he was named Dhanagupta. 
After he had grown up, Sanakavasin went to Gupta and said to
him, “Formerly you promised that when your second son was born 
you would give him to me. Now that the child is born, you should 
allow him to follow me to become a monk.” Gupta said, “May the 
Elder not feel displeased. I have two sons to manage my family 
properties together. I order one to procure wealth and one to 
i 57c safeguard it. If a third son is born, I will give him to the Elder.” 
Then Sanakavasin pondered whether this child was Upagupta or 
not, and he saw that he was not. So he said to Gupta, “Let it be so.”
Then the third son was born, a child with handsome features 
and very lovable. As his pleasant appearance surpassed that of 
other men and was second only to that of heavenly beings, he 
was named Upagupta. When this child had grown up, his father 
kept him to make a lawful living and gained much profit. Then 
Sanakavasin went to Gupta and said to him, “Good man, formerly 
you promised that when your third son was born, you would give 
him to me. Now that this child is born, you should allow him to 
follow me to become a monk.” Gupta said in reply, “I vowed to order 
him to make a living. If he gains or loses [profit], he will not be 
allowed to become a monk. If he neither gains nor loses, he will be 
allowed to become a monk.” Then the king of Maras (the Evil One) 
caused all the people in Mathura to purchase his goods, so that he 
gained profits.
Sanakavasin went to Gupta’s place when Upagupta was selling perfume. The Elder said to him, “Do you know what is good and 
what is bad in your mind and mental activities?” Upagupta said in 
reply, “I do not know what is good and what is bad in my mind and 
mental activities.” The Elder said, “The mind and mental activities 
that tally with greed, hatred, and ignorance are bad; and if they 
tally with non-greed, non-hatred, and non-ignorance, they are 
good.”
At another time the Elder went again to Upagupta and said to 
him, “Good man, how are your mind and mental activities? Are 
they good or bad?” He replied, saying, “I do not know what is good 
and what is bad in my mind and mental activities.” The Elder said, 
“If you wish to know what is good and what is bad in your mind 
and mental activities, you should accept the Way and eliminate
what is bad in your mind and mental activities. I shall do something.” Then the Elder made some pills with black and white clay 
and said to him, “If an evil mind arises, you may take one black 
pill, and if a good mind arises, you may take one white pill. You 
should practice the contemplation of impurity and be mindful of 
the Buddha, as well as meditate on him as has been said.”
At that time, Upagupta intended to do good in his mind and 
mental activities, but he collected many black pills without even a 
single white one. Then he thought that he should try to get 
two-thirds black pills and one-third white ones. He thought again 
that he should get half black pills and half white ones. He further 
thought that he should get two-thirds white pills and one-third 
black ones. And he even thought that he should have only a good 
mind, so that the pills he took were all white ones.
There was then in the country of Mathura a courtesan named 
Vasudatta, whose maidservant once went to the place of Upagupta 
to purchase perfume and received more than she had bought. 
When she returned, her mistress asked her, “Where did you get so 
i58a much perfume? Was it not stolen from the trader?” The maidservant said in reply, “The trader named Upagupta is a person 
of perfect appearance, and he speaks so nicely, while he sells 
his goods lawfully.” When the mistress heard these words, she 
cherished a mind of lustful desire for Upagupta and ordered her 
maidservant to go again to his place. ‘You may tell him that I 
desire to have enjoyment with him.” When the maidservant told 
this to Upagupta, he said, ‘You may tell her that this is not the 
time for me to see her.” The maidservant returned and told this to 
her mistress, who said, “He cannot afford to give me five hundred 
silver coins, so he would not come.” Then she sent again her 
maidservant to go and tell him, “I need no money. I only need you to 
come and have enjoyment with me.” The maidservant again went 
to the place of Upagupta and told him this message. Upagupta still 
answered, “This is not the time for me to see her.” Then the son of 
another rich man went to Vasudatta.
There was then a merchant coming from northern India to the 
country of Mathura with five hundred horses and various kinds
of merchandise. After his arrival, he inquired of the people of 
Mathura, “Where is the most beautiful woman in this country?” 
The people of the country said in reply, “There is a most beautiful 
woman whose name is Vasudatta.” The merchant said, “I wish to 
go to her with five hundred silver coins and various precious 
things.” The courtesan, craving the things, killed the rich man’s 
son [her former paramour], put the corpse in a filthy place, and 
then she enjoyed herself with the merchant. An intimate friend of 
the rich man’s son discovered his body in the filthy place and 
reported the matter to the king. The king said to him, “You will 
seize Vasudatta, amputate her hands and feet, cut off her ears and 
nose, and scatter her body in the wilds.” As ordered by the king, 
her hands and feet were cut off and scattered in the wilds.
Upon hearing that Vasudatta had had her hands and feet cut 
off and scattered in the wilds, Upagupta thought, “Formerly I did 
not wish to see her and enjoy the five desires with her, but now I 
wish to see her and have a look at her hands, feet, ears, and nose.” 
And then he uttered the following stanza:
In the best of clothes was she formerly clad;
With different jewels was she decked;
Such were the things with which 
Her person was adorned.
One who takes delight in liberation,
Who wishes to leave the world with detestation,
Should not go to see her then,
When she was decked with precious jewels,
But should go to see her now,
Without joy and without arrogance.
Her beauty is in its original form;
The sight of her arouses disgust and repugnance.
Upagupta, accompanied by a boy holding an umbrella, went into 
the wilds. The maidservant, in remembrance of her mistress’s 
kindness, stayed beside her to drive away the crows, not allowing 
them to attack and peck her. The maidservant said to her mistress, 
“Formerly you sent for Upagupta several times. Is he coming no
with a lustful mind?” Upon hearing these words, her mistress said, 
“My good appearance has now been deformed. It is really a great 
pain. Now I am on this ground smeared with blood and my whole 
body is red. Such being my body, how can anyone have a lustful 
mind at the sight of it?” Then she said to her maidservant, “Collect 
my hands, feet, ears, and nose and put them in one place, so that 
he may not see them.” The maidservant placed them together and 
covered them with a piece of cloth. Then Upagupta arrived and 
stood looking at Vasudatta. When Vasudatta saw Upagupta, she 
said to him, “Here comes the good holy man. Formerly when my 
body was capable of enjoying the five desires I sent for you, but you 
said that it was not the time. Why do you come now when my 
hands and feet have been amputated and I am in a bloody mire?” 
And she uttered the following stanza:
Formerly this body of mine 
Resembled a lotus flower;
I wore a precious garment 
Of great price for its adornment.
But devoid of merit 
I could not see you.
“Such as I am now, why do you come? This body of mine is without 
ornaments and without joy, smeared with blood for scented ointment. It is a sight of horror and pity.” Upagupta said in reply, “I 
have not come with a mind of lustful desire. It is for the sake of 
contemplating lustful desire and impurity that I have come.” And 
he also uttered the following stanza:
With various precious garments 
And different kinds of flowers 
You adorned yourself 
And distracted those who saw you.
All the people who wished to see you,
But had no wealth,
Could not see you.
Now this body of yours 
Is scattered all over the place.
Of all the people,
None has not seen it.
Your beauty has returned to its true form, 
Devoid of adornments 
And with such a stench.
The corpse is but a skeleton,
Covered with a layer of thin skin,
Filled with blood,
Wrapped in the thin skin,
Stuffed with flesh
And a thousand veins and arteries
Intertwining throughout the body.
Such is corporeality.
Where lies the beauty?
Damsels and maidens 
Are outwardly lovable.
When people see them,
Their desire is aroused.
If they know what is inside,
They will attain deliverance.
The noble and respected, the mean and low, 
All bear alike stinking corpses.
When a fool sees them,
He considers them pure.
When a wise man sees them,
He perceives them as impure.
This foul and filthy body 
Is a store of impurity.
With various kinds of incense 
It is fumigated.
This body is only abominable,
With dirt, grime, pus, and blood.
Different kinds of garments 
Are used for its ornaments.
It is a container of dirt 
Washed clean with water.
Fools and sinners
Are attached to it with love.
Those who have heard the good Dharma 
As spoken by the Buddha,
Who profess and accept it
With minds delighting in deliverance,
Who enter groves of solitude 
Depending on the Way as a raft,
Will cross to the other shore.
Upon hearing these words, Vasudatta deeply feared rebirth, and 
when she heard about the virtues of the Buddha, she changed her 
mind and took delight in nirvana. In reply to Upagupta, she 
uttered the following stanza:
This is so, this is so;
This is as you have said.
You are truly intelligent and wise 
And possess great kindness.
You should tell me more now
About the Buddha’s wonderful Dharma.
Upagupta then preached the Dharma, namely the four noble 
truths, point by point. He also contemplated the body, and through 
the contemplation of the body he realized the detestability of the 
world of desire. As he himself preached the Dharma, he thoroughly 
comprehended the four noble truths and attained the fruition of an 
anagamin, while Vasudatta attained the fruition of a srota-apanna.
At that time Vasudatta said to Upagupta, “Excellent! Excellent! Mahasattva (great being), it is by your power that the three 
evil ways and the places of great sufferings are closed, and that the 
path leading to heaven and nirvana is opened. Now I take refuge 
in the Tathagata, the one worthy of worship and fully enlightened, 
as well as in his Dharma and Sangha.” And she also uttered the 
following stanza:
I go to take refuge in the Buddha,
The Most Honored One among bipeds,
Whose eyes resemble blue lotuses,
And who is praiseworthy among men and heavenly beings;
And also in his pure Dharma, free from desires;
As well as in the supreme arhat Sangha.
Having made her happy through his preaching of the Dharma, 
Upagupta returned to his own place, and shortly after his departure Vasudatta died and was reborn in the heavens. At that time, 
the heavenly beings informed the people of Mathura that she had 
been reborn in the heavens. After hearing this, the people made
offerings to her remains. /
Then the Elder Sanakavasin went to Gupta and said to him, 
“You should allow Upagupta to follow me and become a monk.” 
Gupta said in reply, “Formerly I promised you that I would ask 
him to make a living and would allow him to become a monk 
only if he were unskillful and blunt in business.” Then the Elder 
i59a Sanakavasin, employing his supernatural powers, rendered 
[Upagupta] unskillful and blunt in business. Upagupta thought 
that he was unskillful and blunt in measurement and calculation. 
Sanakavasin went again to Gupta and said to him, “This son of 
yours has been predicted by the Buddha, who said, ‘A hundred 
years after my nirvana he will perform a Buddha’s functions.’ You 
should allow him to follow me and become a monk.” Then Gupta 
allowed him to become a monk.
At that time, the Elder Sanakavasin brought Upagupta to the 
Natabhatika Monastery and made him a fully ordained monk. At 
the moment of the first karman, he got rid of all bondages and 
attained the fruition of arhatship. Sanakavasin said to Upagupta, 
“Good man, you have been predicted by the Buddha: ‘A hundred 
years after my nirvana, there will be a bhiksu named Upagupta 
who will be a Buddha without the characteristic marks of a 
Buddha and will perform a Buddha’s functions.’ And he also said 
that among the Buddha’s disciples, you would be foremost in 
edifying others. Good man, you should perform beneficial deeds for 
the Buddha-dharma.” Upagupta said in reply, “Let it be so!” And 
Sanakavasin taught him to preach the Dharma.
When all the people of Mathura heard that a bhiksu named 
Upagupta, who was a Buddha without the characteristic marks of 
a Buddha, was going to preach the Dharma, innumerable thousands of people wished to go to listen to him. The Elder Upagupta 
then contemplated in samädhi and saw that when the Buddha 
preached the Dharma, his audience, consisting of the four groups 
of devotees, sat in a group shaped like a crescent moon. He 
contemplated again: In what order did the World-honored One 
teach the Dharma? And he saw that the order was the taste of 
desire, the faults of desire, the outlet of desire, the four faiths, and 
so on, one by one up to nirvana. Upagupta also preached the 
Dharma in the same way.
At that time, the king of Maras rained pearls on the assembly 
to distract the minds of the people. As the people in the assembly 
were distracted, none of them could understand the four noble 
truths. Upon seeing that the minds of the people were distracted, 
Upagupta thought to himself, “Who is doing this to distract the 
minds of the assembly?” Then he found that it was being done by 
the king of Maras.
On the second day the people who came doubled in number, 
and Upagupta again preached the true Dharma of the four noble 
truths point by point. At that time, the king of Maras again rained 
gold to distract the minds of the assembly, and none of the people 
could understand the four noble truths. Upon seeing that the 
minds of the people were distracted, Upagupta thought to himself, 
“Who is doing this to distract the minds of the assembly?” Then he 
found that it was being done by the king of Maras.
On the third day the people who came doubled in number, and 
Upagupta again preached the Dharma, while the king of Maras 
again rained pearls mixed with gold, to the accompaniment of 
heavenly music performed by apsaras (goddesses). As the people 
in the assembly were not free from desire, their minds were excited 
by the sight of the beauties and the sounds of music, and they 
listened no more to the preaching of the Dharma. The king of 
159b Maras then put a garland around the neck of Upagupta. Upagupta 
thought, ‘Who is doing this?” He found that it was being done by
the king of Maras. He pondered in his mind, “As this king of Maras 
always caused disturbance to the Dharma-pjta&a of the Worldhonored One, why did the World-honored One not edify him?” 
Then he thought to himself, “I may edify him, as the Buddha 
predicted that I would be a Buddha without the characteristic 
marks of a Buddha to edify people and convert them.” Then he 
considered, “Is this the right time for me to edify him?” He saw that 
the time had arrived for the king of Maras to receive edification.
At that time, the Elder Upagupta took three corpses, the first 
of a dead snake, the second of a dead dog, and the third of a dead 
man. With his supernatural powers, he transformed the three 
corpses into garlands and took them to the place of the king of 
Maras. At the sight of Upagupta, the king of Maras was greatly 
pleased, [thinking], “Upagupta has accepted my edification.” And 
he stretched his body to receive the garlands. Upagupta tied him 
up with his own hands, fastened the dead snake on his head, and 
fixed the dead dog and dead man under his neck. Upagupta said 
to the king of Maras, “As you first insulted me with unrighteous 
flowers, now I return [the insult to] you by fastening corpses upon 
you. Now you are dealing with a son of the Buddha. If you have 
any supernatural power, show it to me.” Just like a gale that 
agitates the water of the sea into waves but cannot stir Malaya 
Mountain, so the king of Maras wished to free himself from the 
corpses but could not do so even though he tried with utmost effort. 
He was as helpless as a gnat trying to move a mountain. Greatly 
enraged, the king of Maras rose up into the air and uttered the 
following stanza:
If I cannot free myself
From the corpses on my neck,
I may be freed by other divine beings
With powers greater than mine.
The Elder Upagupta also uttered the following stanza:
You may go to take refuge under Brahman, /
The sun, the moon, and Sakra;
You may go into fire and the great sea;
The corpses will not be burned, rotted, or loosed.
I have bound these corpses 
Tightly on your neck.
It was done by supernatural power,
And none can detach them.
The king of Maras went to Mahesvara and Sakra in the Thirtythree heavens as well as to the Four Heavenly Eings, trying to get 
rid of the corpses, but he could not free himself from them. Then 
he went to Mahabrahman. Mahabrahman said to him, “Good m an,
since this was done by the supernatural powers of a disciple 
possessing the ten powers, who ever could rid you of them? It is 
like water that cannot break the shore of a great sea.” He also 
uttered the following stanza:
If Snow Mountain is bound 
With fibers of lotus root,
It can be lifted up 
Without much difficulty.
It is by the power of divinity 
That corpses are fixed on your body.
I do not have the ability 
To rid you of them.
All the powers possessed 
By me and the heavenly beings 
Cannot surpass those of the Tathagata 
And his disciples,
As other lights are inferior 
To the light of fire,
As the light of fire is inferior 
To the light of the sun.
The king of Maras said, ‘What would you teach me to do? Under 
whom shall I take refuge?” Mahabrahman said, “You should now 
go quickly to take refuge under Upagupta. As a man has to 
stand up from where he has fallen, you have to stand up through 
his supernatural powers, since your downfall was caused by his 
supernatural powers.” Then the king of Maras realized that the
supernatural powers of a son of the Buddha were great. He pondered over the matter and uttered the following stanza:
If Mahabrahman takes refuge
In the Buddha, his disciples, and the Dharma,
Who else can estimate and measure 
The divine powers of the Tathagata?
The Tathagata’s divine powers 
Really could have subjugated me.
But out of pity and compassion 
He did not subdue me.
“Now I have come to know the powers of the Buddha, and it needs 
no extensive reiteration.” He also uttered the following stanza:
Now I understand
That the World-honored One is compassionate,
And that his mind is free from impurities,
Comparable to a golden mountain.
Because of my ignorance,
I disturbed the Buddha everywhere 
And did evil at all places;
But he did not subdue me by force.
Then the king of Maras, who was the lord of the world of desire, 
had no place to escape from Upagupta and pondered over the 
matter. He gave up his arrogance, went to Upagupta, and worshipped at his feet, saying, “Elder, since the time of the Bodhi tree 
up to the present day, the evils I have committed against the 
World-honored One are immeasurable and innumerable. Once I 
caused the Buddha to have no food to eat when he went to the 
house of a Brahman in the country of Sala. That was done by me. 
For the evils I committed, the Buddha did not blame me. Sometimes I changed myself into a dragon, a snake, a wicked demon, or 
various kinds of fearful things to frighten him, but the Worldhonored One never blamed me. Elder, today you are pitiless and 
cause the whole world of heavenly beings and Asuras to blame and 
sneer at me, making me feel ashamed.”
Upagupta said to him, “You are unwise and do not know how 
to think of things, trying to compare the merit of the compassion 
of the Tathagata with that of a bhiksu. It is like comparing a grain
of mustard seed with Mount Sumeru, or equating a glowworm 
i60a with the sun, or taking a scoop of water and putting it on a par with 
the great sea. The compassion of a sramana is not comparable to 
that of the compassionate Buddhas of the ten quarters. That was 
why the Buddha could endure the evils you committed.” The 
king of Maras said, “The Buddha had cut off all delusions and 
dissolved all doubts and had great patience. As I was wicked and 
had passions, I was always ready to annoy the Buddha. The 
World-honored One protected me with his compassion. That was 
why the Buddha did not subjugate me. Elder, you should instruct 
me.
Upagupta said in reply, “Good man, now listen to me! You 
committed so many evils and did so many bad things toward the 
Buddha that unless you cherish a mind of faith and respect for 
the Tathagata, you cannot be absolved from your misdeeds. As the 
Buddha had foresight far into the future, he did not subjugate 
you.” He also uttered the following stanza:
Your mind has lacked deep respect,
But the Tathagata has initiated it.
From smallness it will increase to greatness 
Until you gain the fruit of nirvana.
Of all the evils you have committed,
Only a brief part has been told.
You should wash away the defilement of passion 
With the water of the wisdom of recollection.
The king of Maras remembered the Buddha, and the hair on his 
body bristled like kadamba flowers. He also uttered the following 
stanza:
Many things I did
To vex the World-honored One,
But he was not angry.
I wish to be compared to a son
Whose guilt and faults are forgiven 
By his father’s pardon.
At that time, the king of Maras spent much time in meditating on 
the beneficence of the Buddha, and as he remembered the Buddha 
his mind was cooled down. He worshipped at the Elder’s feet and 
uttered the following stanza:
The Elder today 
Has accepted me 
And enabled me to revere 
The World-honored One.
Now these corpses 
Are bound on my neck 
As my ornaments.
May the great recluse,
By the power of compassion,
Remove them for me.
The Elder Upagupta said, “If you can make a promise, I shall 
remove them for you.” The king of Maras inquired, “What promise?” Upagupta said, “From now onward you should never annoy 
bhiksus.” The king of Maras said in reply, “Let it be so! Let it be so! 
But you should teach me how to do it.” The Elder answered, 
saying, “The Dharma -pitaka of the World-honored One should 
be widely spread, and that is what I am doing.” Being amazed, 
the king of Maras said again, “Teach me how to do it!” The 
Elder said in reply, “You should know that I became a monk one 
hundred years after the Tathagata entered nirvana. I have seen 
i 60b the Dharmakaya of the World-honored One, but I have not seen 
his Rupakaya (physical body). As you are now accepted by me, you 
should show me the Rupakaya of the Tathagata. I now take delight 
in nothing else except in seeing the body of the Buddha.” The king 
of Maras replied with the following stanza:
We should make an agreement together.
When you see what I appear to be,
The material body of the Tathagata,
You must not worship me.
Only to the All-wise One 
Should homage be paid.
If the Elder paid it to me,
I should be destroyed.
Now I am not qualified
To bear the worship of a holy man,
Just as the bud of an airavata tree 
Cannot bear the weight 
Of the tusk of an elephant.
Thus we should make this agreement.
The Elder Upagupta said in reply, “Let it be so. I shall not worship 
you.” The king of Maras said again, “Just wait a few moments. I 
shall enter the grove and transform myself into the form of the 
Buddha with brilliant golden hues and a halo as bright as sunlight, 
just as I did once in the past to mislead a wealthy man named 
Sura. Such a material body was wonderful. I shall now appear as 
it, so that all those who see it may have faith with joy.” Then the 
Elder Upagupta said in reply, “Let it be so.” And he removed 
the three corpses, as he wished to see the physical body of the 
Tathagata.
Then the king of Maras went into the grove and transformed 
himself into the body of the Buddha. Having assumed the form of 
the Buddha, he came out of the grove, just as a woman goes behind 
a screen to adorn herself and comes out again after having dressed 
up. The physical form of the Tathagata was incomparable, and 
none of the people who saw it was not pleased to see it. It was like 
a colored painting with different hues.
When the king of Maras had glorified the grove with his 
transformed body, he also appeared as Sariputra at the right 
side and Maudgalyayana at the left. Again, he appeared as 
Ananda holding an alms bowl at the back and as Mahakasyapa, 
Aniruddha, Subhuti, and so on, as one thousand two hundred fifty 
great sravakas surrounding the transformed Buddha in a group 
shaped like a crescent moon. After having made these transformations, he went to Upagupta. Being greatly delighted to have
seen the Buddha’s physical form, Upagupta rose from his seat and 
watched the physical form of the Buddha without turning his eyes 
away from it for a moment. And he uttered the following stanza:
Impermanence is merciless;
It ruined the Tathagata’s material form.
Impermanent was the Tathagata;
He dissolved his form and entered nirvana.
Upagupta fixed his attention on the Buddha, and his mind could 
not part from him. “Now I see this transformed body, and it is the 
same as seeing the real Buddha.” With a concentrated mind, he 
put his hands palm to palm and uttered the following brief stanza 
in praise of the Buddha:
His face is superior to a lotus flower,
His eyes, better than the bloom of the utpala.
His color outshines a grove of many blossoms 
And also surpasses real gold.
He is more lovely than the moon;
His light is brighter than the sun.
His wisdom is deeper than the sea;
Steadier than Mount Sumeru is his immovability.
He walks more gracefully than the king of lions,
And he blinks more sedately than the king of bulls.
As his mind was filled with joy, he again uttered the following 
stanza aloud:
By his deeds of mental purity,
He has gained this excellent fruit.
It was created by his own deeds 
And was not made by others.
For countless and innumerable kalpas
He cultivated pure deeds of body and speech 
And practiced the six paramitas perfectly 
As ornaments for his unhindered body.
All those who see him are overjoyed;
He is admired even by his enemies.
Now, as I see the Tathagata,
How can I not feel joyous?
As he was thinking of the Buddha, Upagupta did not sense that it 
was Mara and prostrated himself at full length at the feet of the 
king of Maras like a great tree with its roots broken falling on the 
ground. Being startled, the king of Maras said, “Elder, you should 
not break your promise.” The Elder said in reply, “What promise?” 
The king of Maras said, “We made an agreement that when I 
appeared as the Buddha, you would not worship me. Why do you 
worship me now?” The Elder rose from the ground and replied in 
a low voice, “I am not unaware that the Tathagata entered nirvana 
like fire extinguished by water. But [when] I saw the physical body 
of the Tathagata, it was so wonderful that I worshipped it; I did 
not worship you.” The king of Maras inquired, “You prostrated 
yourself with your head touching my feet; how can you say that 
you did not worship me?” Upagupta said, “I neither worshipped 
you nor did I break my promise. Now listen to me. Suppose there 
is a Buddha image made of clay; the worshipper thinks of it as the 
Buddha and not as clay. Now, as I see you, I think of you as the 
Buddha and not as a Mara.”
Then the king of Maras ceased to assume the appearance 
of the Buddha, made offerings to Upagupta, and returned to 
his own place. Four days later, the king of Maras struck a bell 
with his own hands to make an announcement to all people: 
“Those who wish to be reborn in the heavens and attain nirvana 
should go to Upagupta to seek advice and receive the right 
Dharma from him. Those who have not seen the Buddha should 
go to Upagupta.” Then the king of Maras uttered the following 
stanza:
Those who wish to enjoy wealth and nobility 
And do not like to live in poverty, 
i6ia Who wish to enjoy heavenly bliss
And the great happiness of nirvana,
Should listen to and accept the Dharma 
And ponder over its meanings and main points.
Those who have not seen 
The supreme one among bipeds,
The great teacher possessing compassion 
Who spontaneously gained the holy Dharma,
Should all go to Upagupta.
He is the man acting as a bright lamp 
For this world.
At that time, his voice was heard throughout the country of 
Mathura. After Upagupta had subdued the king of Maras, the 
Brahmans and all the other people in the country of Mathura went 
to Upagupta. He was sitting on a lion seat and preaching the 
Dharma for the congregation without any fear in his mind, like a 
lion. He uttered the following stanza:
A man without intelligence 
Can never ascend the lion seat.
If he ascended the high seat,
He would be deeply struck with great fear.
Only a man as fearless as a lion,
Who can refute the theories of the heretics,
Is competent 
To ascend the lion seat.
Upagupta preached the Dharma point by point, namely, the four 
noble truths, which were first spoken at the beginning. At that 
time, innumerable people attained the fruition of a srota-apanna,
a sakrdagamin, or an anagdmin, and eighteen thousand persons 
renounced their homes and attained arhatship through the practice of meditation and the strenuous cultivation of the Way.
On Urumanda Mountain there was a cave eighteen cubits long 
and twelve cubits broad. At that time all the disciples had done 
what they ought to do, and the Elder Upagupta said to them, “I 
have taught all my disciples to attain arhatship. Each of you who 
have attained arhatship should put a chip four inches long into the 
cave.” In one day’s time eighteen thousand arhats put chips into 
the cave. It became widely known throughout the great earth 
up to the seaside that in the country of Mathura there lived
Upagupta, who was the foremost in teaching and converting the 
people as the Buddha had predicted.
The Causes of Sanakavasin’s Attainment of the Way
/ _
When Sanakavasin had made Upagupta a monk and Upagupta 
converted and subdued the king of Maras, Sanakavasin thought 
for the sake of converting living beings, “I have already received 
the right Dharma, and now I wish to proceed to the country of 
Kasmira to enjoy the bliss of samddhi, as it was predicted by the 
World-honored One that the county of Kasmira would be a firsti6ib rate place for sitting in meditation.” Then Sanakavasin went there 
and entered a cave to enjoy the bliss of samddhi. When a gust of 
cool wind blew on his body, he realized arhatship and enjoyed the 
bliss of emancipation. Then he uttered the following stanza:
Wearing a sana garment,
Keeping contact with five kinds of samddhi
At the best place on the mountain,
I sit erect in meditation.
May the voice of the wind
Announce to the whole of Kasmira: /
This person Sanakavasin 
Has gained the bliss of the Way.
I pledge with my purity
That I have gained perfect liberation.
This person Sanakavasin 
Has uttered this stanza himself.
Chapter Vili
The Causes of Upagupta’s Disciples
The Causes of the Son of a Tigress
When Upagupta was residing at Natabhatika Monastery on Great 
Cream Mountain in the country of Mathura, a tigress gave birth 
to a cub not far from the monastery. As she could not go to seek 
food, she died of starvation. With a mind of beneficence and 
compassion, Upagupta fed the cub. Upagupta had five hundred 
disciples who had not gained the fruition of the Way. They said to 
their teacher, “Why do you feed a living being bom in an unfortunate state of existence?” Their teacher said in reply, “Good men, 
it is for the cause of its emancipation.” Upon hearing these words, 
his disciples were amazed and had doubts in their minds. “How 
can a living being born in an unfortunate state of existence acquire 
the cause of emancipation?”
The cub had a short span of life, and when it was about to die, 
Upagupta said to it, “All deeds are impermanent, all things are 
devoid of an ego, and nirvana is quietude. You should have faith in 
me and abhor the way of rebirth as an animal.” Then the cub 
cherished a mind of faith and respect toward the Elder. After 
having had faith and respect it died and was reborn among human 
beings in the country of Mathura. When he reached the age of 
seven, he was converted by Upagupta and became a monk, and in 
i6 ic seven years he attained arhatship. With his supernatural powers 
he plucked different kinds of flowers to offer to Upagupta.
Upagupta was surrounded by his disciples as the arhat disciple came through the air and stood before him. The five hundred 
disciples who had not gained the Way said to their teacher, “This is our schoolmate. He is still young, so how could he have gained 
the merits of supernatural powers?” Their teacher said in reply, 
“He was the cub in his previous life, and you asked me why I should 
feed such a living being as he. It was because he had seen me and 
heard the Dharma that he gained his present fruition.” Then 
Upagupta preached the Dharma to his five hundred disciples. And 
so they got a deep sense of shame, cut off their passions, and 
attained arhatship.
The Causes of Gorasa (Cow’s Milk)
In southern India there was a man who became a monk in the 
Buddha-dharma and always feared rebirth but was unable to 
attain nirvana. He thought in his mind, “Who can preach the 
Dharma to edify me? If anybody can preach the Dharma to edify me, 
I shall attain nirvana.” Then he heard that in the country of Mathura 
there was a disciple named Upagupta, whom the World-honored 
One had predicted would be the foremost in edification. Having 
heard this, he went to Upagupta in the country of Mathura . Upon 
reaching there, he worshipped at his feet and said with his hands 
joined palm to palm, “Elder, the Buddha has entered nirvana. 
Elder, you should now perform the Buddha’s functions and preach 
the Dharma for me.” When Upagupta saw that this was the monk’s 
last reincarnation, that he feared the pains of rebirth, and that he 
came from a distant place with a thin and extremely weary body, 
he said, “Good man, rest yourself for a while.” The man was used 
to living on milk and curds, but in the country of Mathura there 
was food and drink of every description except milk and curds, so 
Upagupta asked him to proceed by another path.
On the other path the man met with a group of women carrying milk, curds, beverages, and ghee. They were coming from 
another country with the intention of entering this country. The 
women asked the Elder why he was so weak and thin. He said in 
reply, “Sisters, I was born in southern India and always lived on 
milk and curds. But in this country of Mathura there is food and
drink of every description except milk and curds, and that is why 
I am weak and thin.” Then, to make him strong, all the women 
gave him milk, curds, and ghee for several days.
Upagupta then preached the Dharma for him; and he practiced it with diligence and attained arhatship. Upagupta said to 
him, “Take a chip and put it into the cave.” He followed the 
instruction.
The Causes of a Southern Indian
i 62a In southern India there was a man who had immoral relations 
with the wife of another man and often went to her house. His 
mother, not wanting to allow him to do so, said to him, “If a man 
commits this evil deed, he will stop at nothing in doing evil.” Out 
of anger, that man murdered his mother; and after committing the 
crime he went to another country. As he could not satisfy his five 
desires in that country, he felt so deeply vexed and miserable that 
he became a monk in the Buddha-dharma. Then he thoroughly 
mastered the Tripitaka and became a man of great erudition. 
Surrounded by his disciples, he went with them to Upagupta at 
Natabhatika Monastery in the country of Mathura. Upagupta 
observed him in contemplation and saw that he had murdered his 
mother and that on account of this felony he could not perceive the 
truth or gain the fruit of the Way. Although he came from a distant 
place, [Upagupta] did not greet him with comfort. The bhiksu then 
went far away from there with a mind of shame.
Upagupta’s five hundred disciples who had not gained the Way 
witnessed the incident and felt displeased with their teacher. They 
thought, “The upadhyaya is lacking in wisdom. He would preach 
the Dharma for an old bhiksu with a dull and stupid mind but 
would not preach for this bhiksu who is clever and intelligent, 
well-versed in the Tripitaka, and followed by his retinue.”
Upagupta saw that his disciples harbored a feeling of anger 
1 against him, and he also saw that their minds had to be converted and quelled by his upadhyaya Sanakavasin. At that time
Sanakavasin was residing in the country of Kasmira; and when he 
observed whether Upagupta was performing the Buddha’s functions or not, he saw that his five hundred disciples were indignant 
with him and did not show respect to their teacher. Having seen 
this, he reflected, <cWhy does Upagupta not edify them?” Then he 
made a deeper observation and saw that they could not be edified 
by Upagupta and that they should be edified by him.
Sanakavasin went to that monastery by his supernatural 
powers while Upagupta was rambling outside. Sanakavasin then 
entered the monastery with a long beard and long hair and wearing a coarse garment. Upon seeing him, the disciples of Upagupta 
said to him, “Ignorant old man, where did you come from with a 
long beard and long hair and wearing a coarse garment to our 
teacher’s monastery? Our upadhyaya did not preach the Dharma 
to an intelligent bhiksu well-versed in the Tripitaka who came 
here before. How can he preach it for you, an old and dull man?”
When Sanakavasin entered the monastery, he sat on the seat 
of Upagupta. Upagupta’s disciples were angry at seeing it and 
tried to drag him off with their hands, but he was as immovable 
as Mount Sumeru. Then they intended to rebuke him, but they 
lost their voices. So they reported to Upagupta, saying, “A poor 
old bhiksu has come into the upadhyaya’s monastery and is sitting on the upadhyaya’s seat.” Upagupta said to his disciples in 
reply, “Nobody except my upadhyaya can sit on my seat.” When
i62b Upagupta returned to the monastery, he made offerings to his /
upadhyaya Sanakavasin with the utmost veneration and took a 
small seat, sitting on it beside his teacher. Upagupta’s disciples
thought, “Perhaps this bhiksu is the teacher of our upadhyaya, but
_ _ f — his wisdom is not as good as that of our upadhyaya.” Sanakavasin 
saw their minds and reflected, “What expedient shall I employ to 
eliminate their arrogance?” After having seen it, he raised his 
right arm while milk came out from his hand, and he said to 
Upagupta, “Good man, what is this samadhi?” Upagupta said to 
his upadhyaya in reply, “I do not know the name of this samadhi.”
His upadhyaya told him, “It is named the Samadhi as Powerful as 
a Dragon.” For a second time, milk came out again, and he asked,
“What is the name of this samadhi?” Upagupta said in reply, “I do
not know the name of this samadhi.” His upadhyaya said, “It is
named the Samadhi of Pure Harmony and the [Seven] Phases
of Enlightenment.” And he also extensively related various kinds
of samadhi. Upagupta said to his upadhyaya, “May the upadhyaya
speak what is within the scope of my wisdom and not speak what
is beyond my scope.” Sanakavasin said to Upagupta, “Good man,
the name of the samadhi that is comprehended by the wisdom of
a Buddha is unknown to a pratyekabuddha. The name of the
samadhi that is comprehended by the wisdom of a pratyekabuddha is unknown to Sariputra. The name of the samadhi that
/
is comprehended by the wisdom of Sariputra is unknown to 
Maudgalyayana. The name of the samadhi that is comprehended 
by the wisdom of Maudgalyayana is unknown to Mahakasyapa. 
And the name of the samadhi comprehended by the wisdom of 
my upadhyaya is unknown to me.” Sanakavasin said again, “Good 
man, at the time of my nirvana, the Dharma of all these samadhis
will be lost. Moreover, the Jataka stories of the World-honored 
One with their seventy-seven thousand names will also be 
lost. Ten thousand Abhidharmas will be lost, too.” When the 
disciples of Upagupta heard this, they felt sorry and vexed, and 
then they thought, “The wisdom of this bhiksu is superior to that
r _
of our upadhyaya.” Thus their arrogance vanished. Sanakavasin 
preached the Dharma to edify the disciples, and all of them attained 
arhatship.
At that time, the Elder Sanakavasin said to Upagupta, “Good 
man, the World-honored One transmitted the Dharma-pitaka to 
Mahakasyapa and entered nirvana; Mahakasyapa transmitted it 
to my upadhyaya and entered nirvana; and my upadhyaya transmitted it to me and entered nirvana. Now I transmit it to you and 
shall enter nirvana. You should guard and protect this Dharmapitaka. In this country of Mathura, a man will be born with the 
name of Dhltika. He will become a monk, and you may transmit 
this Dharma-pitaka to him.”
When the Elder Sanakavasin had transmitted the Dharmai62c pitaka to Upagupta, he rose into the air by his supernatural
powers, appeared in the four respect-inspiring postures, and 
entered the fire samddhi. After the conclusion of the samddhi,
different kinds of flowers, blue, yellow, red, and white, emerged 
from his body. Water flowed from the upper part of his body 
and fire spurted from the lower part. Fire also spurted from the 
upper part while water flowed from the lower part. His body 
was as upright and dignified as a mountain, with water coming 
out from one side and fire from the other. With his various supernatural powers, Sanakavasin made the bhiksus and lay supporters happy and free in their minds. After having made such 
transformations, he entered nirvana like a fire quenched by water. 
At that time, Upagupta and eighteen thousand arhat disciples 
made offerings to the body, for which they built a stupa and a 
temple.
The Causes of a Northern Indian
When Upagupta was residing at Natabhatika Monastery in the 
country of Mathura, there was a good man in northern India who 
became a monk in the Dharma of the World-honored One. He 
was well-learned and intelligent, and he thoroughly mastered the 
Tripitaka. He preached the Dharma so well and in such a good way 
that wherever he went he was invited by the people to preach the 
Dharma. Thus he preached the Dharma in three ways for the 
people. He often thought to himself, ‘Who can preach the Dharma 
for me, so as to enable me to gain the Way?” He heard that in the 
country of Mathura there was a bhiksu named Upagupta who 
was foremost in edification and had been predicted by the Buddha 
to be a Buddha without the characteristic marks of a Buddha. 
After hearing this, he went to that country and reached Natabhatika Monastery. After arriving at the place where Upagupta 
was, he said, The World-honored One has entered nirvana. 
Elder, you are now performing the Buddha’s functions. May 
you preach the Dharma for me.” Then he uttered the following 
stanza:
The Buddha, who had great compassion,
Has already entered nirvana,
And you are now performing the functions of the Buddha. 
For the ignorant, blind, and dull in the world,
You are the light of wisdom,
Illuminating the world like sunlight.
There is no other teacher in the world.
You are the only one to be our teacher,
The best one in edifying disciples.
May the Elder teach and edify me.
Then Upagupta observed the man’s mind in contemplation and 
saw that he was in his last reincarnation and deeply feared 
rebirth. Why did he not obtain the holy Dharma in his previous 
incarnation? He saw that it was because the conditions were 
incomplete. Upagupta provided the conditions to make them complete. He also saw that the man’s mind took delight in the bliss of 
sitting in meditation and did not wish to preach the Dharma. 
Upagupta said to him, “Good man, if you can accept my instruction, then I shall preach for you.” He said in reply, “I shall do so. 
Upagupta said, ‘You should preach three kinds of Dharma.” He 
i63a asked again, ‘What Sutra shall I preach?” Upagupta said, “The 
five merits of learnedness: (1) the expedient of skandhas (aggregates), (2) the expedient of dhàtus (spheres), (3) the expedient of 
âyatanas (entrances), (4) the expedient of hetupratyaya (cause and 
subcause), and (5) the preaching of the Dharma for the edification 
of others, without waiting for teaching from others. Now I have 
taught you the three kinds of Dharma.” Then the monk preached 
the Dharma according to the sequence, and after having preached 
the Dharma he attained arhatship. Thus he took a chip and threw 
it into the cave.
The Causes of Devaraksita
When the master merchant Devaraksita, who was in the country 
of the Nakulas and who always took delight in alms-giving and
had faith in the Buddha, intended to sail overseas, he announced 
like a lion’s roar, “If I return safely from the seas, I shall sponsor 
the quinquennial assembly of the Buddha-dharma.” All the 
heavenly beings heard and remembered his words, and all the 
people in the country came to know about it, saying, “Devaraksita, 
the master merchant, has made a lion’s roar, saying, 'When I 
return from the seas, I shall sponsor the quinquennial assembly of 
the Buddha-dharma.’ ”
There was then living in that country an arhat bhiksuni. She 
observed in her meditation whether Devaraksita would safely 
return from the seas or not, and she saw that he would safely 
return. She also saw that after his return he would sponsor the 
quinquennial assembly of the Buddha-dharma. She again tried to 
see how many monks would join in the assembly, and she saw that 
the number would be eighteen thousand arhats, twice as many 
learners, and innumerable ordinary persons. Who would be the 
Presiding Elder of the assembly? She saw that the Elder would be 
named Asadha. Then she observed whether the Elder Asadha 
would be an arhat, an anagamin, a sakrdagamin, or a srotaapanna, and she saw that he would be an ordinary person. She 
again observed whether that person would be energetic or indolent 
and saw that he would be energetic. Then she contemplated with 
the intention of inquiring whether he was acting for his own 
benefit or for the benefit of others, and she saw that he was acting 
for his own benefit.
So she went to that monk’s monastery, and after arriving there 
she worshipped the monks in due order and said to the Elder, 
“Most Virtuous One, you are not in strict propriety.” The Elder 
thought to himself, “Why am I deemed to be not in strict propriety?” When he looked at himself and saw that his beard and 
hair were long, he asked a young bhiksu to shave his beard and 
hair. When he had been shaved, the bhiksuni thought, “Does this 
Most Virtuous One understand my words?” Then she saw that the 
most virtuous monk did not understand the meaning of her words, 
and so she went again to the monastery, worshipped the monks in 
due order, and said, “Most Virtuous One, you are not in strict
propriety.” The Elder reflected, “I have shaved my beard and hair. 
Why am I still not in strict propriety?” He looked at himself again 
and saw that his garments were coarse and shabby, and so he 
asked a young disciple to have them washed and dyed. After 
having his garments dyed and tidied, he wore them and sat 
straight. The bhiksunl thought again, “Does the Most Virtuous 
One understand my words?” And she saw that the most virtuous 
monk did not understand what she meant. For the third time the 
arhat bhiksunl went to the monastery, worshipped the monks in 
due order, and said, “Most Virtuous One, you are not in strict 
propriety.” The most virtuous monk said angrily, “I have shaved 
i 63b my beard and hair and have washed and dyed my garments. Why 
do you say I am not in strict propriety?” The bhiksunl said to the 
most virtuous monk, “How can you think that these are the 
proprieties of the Buddha-dharma? If you can attain the four 
fruitions, then they are the proprieties of the Buddha-dharma. 
Furthermore, Most Virtuous One, the master merchant Devaraksita 
has made an announcement like a lion’s roar: When I return safely 
from the seas, I shall sponsor the quinquennial assembly of the 
Buddha-dharma.’ Have you heard that?” The most virtuous monk 
said in reply, “I have heard it.” She asked again, “Most Virtuous 
One, do you know the number of monks who will join in the 
assembly?” “I do not know,” was the reply. Then the bhiksunl said 
of her own accord that the number of monks would be eighteen 
thousand arhats, twice as many learners, and innumerable ordinary persons. “Most Virtuous One, an ordinary person will be 
the Presiding Elder and will be the first to receive offerings in 
the assembly of arhats. Will this be fitting behavior? Upon hearing these words, the most virtuous monk wept sorrowfully. The 
bhiksunl said, “Why do you weep?” “Sister,” answered the monk, “I 
am getting old. I am not competent to do anything. The bhiksunl
uttered the following stanza:
The Tathagata’s Dharma can be perceived
At no fixed season and occasion.
If one wishes to obtain liberation,
He may get the fruit at any moment
“Again, Most Virtuous One, you should go to Natabhatika Monastery, where lives the bhiksu Upagupta, whom the Buddha predicted would be the foremost in edification among his disciples.” 
Then the elderly bhiksu went stage by stage to Natabhatika 
Monastery in the country of Mathura. When Upagupta saw that 
the Elder was coming, he came out to greet him and said, “Most 
Virtuous One, wash your feet and rest.” The bhiksu said in reply, 
“I do not wish to wash my feet. I wish to see Upagupta.” Upagupta’s 
disciples said, “This is Upagupta. He has come to greet you, Most 
Virtuous One.” The bhiksu was glad to hear this and washed his 
feet. Upagupta edified him and found him some lay supporters to 
look after his bath, food, and drink with various offerings. He also 
said to the karmadana (distributor of duties), “Now we have a 
bhiksu who has gained the two liberations coming to our place of 
meditation.” All of the eighteen thousand arhats entered the 
place of meditation, while the bhiksu came and sat on the chief 
seat at the place of meditation and fell asleep. The karmadana
took a lamp and placed it in front of him with a snap of his 
fingers. The bhiksu was awakened and wished to take up the 
163c lamp. Then Upagupta entered the fire samadhi, and thus all 
of the eighteen thousand arhats also entered the fire samadhi.
The bhiksu was glad to see this sight and uttered the following 
stanza:
All the bhiksus are sitting 
Cross-legged on the ground 
Like dragons in coils,
Brilliant as trees of lamps.
Upagupta edified him by preaching the Dharma, and then the 
bhiksu strenuously practiced meditation and attained arhatship. 
Having done what he wished to do, he returned to his own country. 
Upon seeing that the bhiksu had arrived, the arhat bhiksuni went 
to the monastery and worshipped him, saying, “Most Virtuous 
One, you are today in strict propriety.” The bhiksu said in reply, 
“Sister, it is all due to your effort.”
When the master merchant Devaraksita safely returned from 
the seas, he sponsored the quinquennial assembly. At that time, 
eighteen thousand arhats joined the assembly, and there were 
twice as many learners and innumerable ordinary persons making 
strenuous efforts. The most virtuous Elder said the following 
mystic prayer to Devaraksita: “Tavatah yavantah evambhavantah
bhavantah bhavisyati.” [Such as it is now, may it be so in the 
future.] And he repeated the same prayer at the conclusion of 
the meritorious quinquennial assembly. Devaraksita, the master 
merchant, inquired of the Elder, “The World-honored One has 
preached various Dharmas. Are they any different from what the 
Elder has said in Tavatah yavantah evambhavantah bhavantah
bhavisyati?” The Elder said in reply, “Good man, I said the prayer 
in consideration of your merits. Once in the past, ninety-one 
kalpas ago, we were both master merchants and managed a big 
ship, which we sailed overseas to obtain precious things. When the 
ship was fully loaded, we sailed back to Jambudvipa. On the sea 
we encountered a hurricane, and the ship was blown aground on 
a sandy beach. We collected sand and built a stupa in honor of 
Vipasyin Buddha, the fully enlightened one, and offered precious 
things to the stupa. At that time the heavenly beings showed us 
the way and we re-equipped our big ship. The heavenly beings 
said, Tn seven days there will be a high tide, which will take your 
ship to Jambudvipa.’ On the seventh day the high tide came and 
took our ship to Jambudvipa. On account of our construction of the 
sand stupa, I was not reborn in the evil ways of existence for 
ninety-one kalpas, and on account of that cause I was able to attain 
arhatship, while you were able to make offerings to eighteen 
thousand arhats and twice as many learners as well as innumerable ordinary persons making strenuous efforts. As you have 
made offerings to the Three Treasures, I said the prayer: Tavatah
164a yavantah evambhavantah bhavantah bhavisyati. Moreover, my 
good man, the pains of rebirth are limitless, and you should 
renounce your home to become a monk in the Buddha-dharma.” 
Thereupon, Devaraksita became a monk and attained arhatship.
The Causes of the Brahman with the View
That the Ego Is Real
When Upagupta was residing at Natabhatika Monastery in the 
country of Mathura, there was in Mathura a Brahman who always 
held the view that the ego is real. He asked a Buddhist disciple, “Is 
there any being who can create birth and death?” The Buddhist 
disciple said in reply, “Brahman, please go to Natabhatika Monastery, where a bhiksu named Upagupta is always preaching the 
Dharma of egolessness.” The Brahman went accordingly to that 
monastery when Upagupta was preaching the Dharma for the four 
groups of devotees. Upon seeing the Brahman, Upagupta uttered 
the following stanza of non-ego:
There is no ego in the world 
And nothing that is mine;
There is no personality and no life, 
Except the concept of birth and death.
Upon hearing the Dharma of egolessness, the Brahman cut off 
his view that the ego is real and became a monk at the place 
where Upagupta was. [Upagupta] then preached the Dharma to 
him, and through the energetic practice of meditation the Brahman attained arhatship. Having done what was to be done, the 
Brahman took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of Sleepiness
When Upagupta was residing at Natabhatika Monastery in the 
country of Mathura, a good man who relied upon him became a 
monk. However, this man was fond of sleep and would fall asleep 
even when Upagupta was preaching the Dharma. Upagupta asked 
him to go to a place of meditation; and he went there and sat 
cross-legged under a tree, but he still fell asleep as before. With his 
supernatural powers, Upagupta caused pits one thousand cubits 
deep to appear at the four sides of the bhiksu to frighten him.
Being startled by the sight of the pits, the bhiksu was awakened 
from sleep. Upagupta then made a road by magic power for him to 
follow. The bhiksu followed the road and came to Upagupta, who 
asked him to go back to the place where he had been sitting. The 
bhiksu said in reply, “Upadhyaya, there are pits one thousand 
cubits deep there.” Upagupta said, “Those deep pits are small; the 
biggest pits are those of rebirth. They are known as the pits of 
birth, old age, disease, death, sorrow, grief, suffering, and vexation. If one does not know the four noble truths, one falls into 
them.” The bhiksu then went back to sit cross-legged under the 
tree in meditation, and as he feared the deep pits he did not fall 
asleep again. With a feeling of dread he meditated energetically, 
i64b got rid of all passions, and attained arhatship. Then he took a chip 
and put it into the cave.
The Causes of the Provisor
When Upagupta was residing at Natabhatika Monastery in the 
country of Mathura, a good man who was a native of the Eastern 
Country became a monk in the Buddha-dharma, and as he was 
able to act as a provisor, whichever monastery he stayed in the 
bhiksus always asked him to be their provisor. The bhiksus said to 
him, “If any almsgiver comes to you, you should edify him and ask 
him to perform meritorious deeds.” The provisor was so extremely 
tired of edifying others that he thought, “Who can preach the 
Dharma to edify me?”
Then he heard that in the country of Mathura there was 
a bhiksu by the name of Upagupta, whom the Buddha had predicted would be foremost among the disciples in edifying others. 
So he went to that place, and upon arriving there he worshipped 
at his feet and said, “Most Virtuous One, the Buddha has entered 
nirvana, and you, Most Virtuous One, are performing the Buddha’s 
functions. May you preach the Dharma to me.” Upagupta contemplated and saw that this was [the provisor’s] last reincarnation 
and that he feared rebirth. He contemplated again why he did not
gain the Holy Way, and saw that it was because conditions were 
incomplete. What were the expedients by which to make them 
complete? If he could act again as a provisor, the conditions would 
be complete. But he also saw that the man was extremely tired of 
it and did not wish to act as a provisor.
Upagupta said to him, “Good man, if you follow my instructions, I shall preach the Dharma to you.” “Let it be so.” Upagupta 
said, “You should act again as a provisor to the monks.” The man 
replied, saying, “Most Virtuous One, I do not know who are zealous 
and who are not zealous among the people of Mathura.” The Most 
Virtuous One said to him, “Can you get up early and go to the 
country?” “I can,” was the reply. The bhiksu also asked, “How many 
monks are there in this monastery?” The Most Virtuous One said 
in reply, “There are eighteen thousand arhats, twice as many 
learners, and innumerable energetic ordinary persons.” Then the 
bhiksu acted as a provisor to all the monks so that they might 
concentrate their minds on the practice of the Way.
The provisor bhiksu rose up early, dressed in his robes, and 
with alms bowl in hand went into the country of Mathura. There 
was then a wealthy man coming out of the country of Mathura, and 
he met the bhiksu on the way. He had never met him before; it was 
the first time he had seen him. Upon seeing him, he worshipped at 
his feet, and after worshipping him he asked, “Most Virtuous One, 
are you coming from a far distance or from somewhere near here?” 
The bhiksu replied, “I come from the Eastern Country.” The 
wealthy man asked him, “For what business have you come here?” 
The bhiksu said in reply, “I came to Upagupta with the intention 
of hearing the Dharma. But Upagupta asked me to be provisor to 
the monks. I do not know who are zealous and who are not zealous 
among the people of Mathura.” The wealthy man said, ‘You need 
i64c not worry about this matter. I shall be the provisor in your stead.
I shall provide all the monks with all their food, drink, clothes, and 
medicine.”
Then the bhiksu and the wealthy man jointly provided 
food and drink and other things as offerings to the monks for the 
three months of the retreat during the rainy season. The bhiksu
contemplated the merits he had achieved and attained arhatship. 
So he took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of the Artisan
There was then in the Eastern Country a good man who became a 
monk in the Buddha-dharma, and as he was a good artisan, 
wherever he went the monks would ask him to construct monasteries and build houses. As he did so every day without ceasing, he 
was greatly tired of the task. So he thought to himself, “I wish to 
sit in meditation and contemplation. The Buddha has said that all 
bhiksus should sit in meditation to cultivate the Way and should 
not be lazy and indolent.” And he reflected, “Who can preach the 
Dharma to edify me?” Then he heard that in the country of 
Mathura there was a bhiksu by the name of Upagupta whom the 
Buddha had predicted would be foremost among the disciples in 
edifying others. So he went to him, worshipped at his feet, and 
said, “Most Virtuous One, the Buddha has entered nirvana, and 
you, Most Virtuous One, are performing the Buddha’s functions. 
May you preach the Dharma to me.” Upagupta saw that this was 
the monk’s last reincarnation and that he feared rebirth. He 
contemplated again why he did not obtain the Holy Way and saw 
that it was because causes were incomplete. What were the expedients by which to make them complete? He saw that if the man 
acted again as an artisan, the causes would be complete. But he 
saw that the man was extremely tired of it and did not wish to act 
as an artisan.
Upagupta said to him, “Good man, if you follow my instructions, I shall preach the Dharma to you.” “Let it be so,” was the 
reply. Upagupta said, “If no monastery has been built at a place, 
you should build a monastery there. The Buddha has said that if 
one builds a monastery at a place where no monastery has been 
built, one will gain the merits of purity.” The man replied, “Most 
Virtuous One, I do not know who are zealous and who are not 
zealous among the people of Mathura.” The Most Virtuous One
said to him, “Good man, can you get up early, dress in your robes, 
and go into the country with alms bowl in hand?” “Yes,” was the 
reply. And so he got up early, took up his alms bowl, and went into 
the country.
There was then a wealthy man coming out of the country of 
Mathura. He met the bhiksu on the way, whom he had never seen 
before; it was the first time he had seen him. Upon seeing him, he 
worshipped at the bhiksu’s feet and asked him, “Most Virtuous 
One, are you coming from a far distance or from somewhere near 
here?” The bhiksu replied, saying, “I came from the Eastern Country.” The wealthy man inquired of him, “For what business have 
you come here?” The bhiksu answered, saying, “I came to Upagupta 
with the intention of hearing the Dharma, but Upagupta said to 
me, ‘If no monastery has been built at a place, you should build a 
monastery there.’ But I do not know who are zealous and who are 
i65a not zealous among the people of Mathura.” The wealthy man said, 
“Most Virtuous One, you need not worry about this matter. I shall 
make various preparations for the bhiksus.” Then the bhiksu and 
the wealthy man intended to build a monastery at a place where 
there was no monastery. Working together with the wealthy man, 
the bhiksu held a rope to measure the ground. Before the rope 
touched the ground, he contemplated the merits he had achieved 
therefrom and got rid of all passions. After having attained arhatship, he took a chip and threw it into the cave.
The Causes of Food and Drink
In the country of Mathura there was a good man who became a 
monk at the place where Upagupta was, and as he was greedy for 
food, he could not gain the Way. Upagupta said to him, “I shall give 
you some food tomorrow.” On the following day he filled a vessel 
with gruel and placed it together with an empty vessel in front of 
him, saying, ‘You may take the food and empty the vessel.” He also 
said, “Cool the gruel and eat it slowly.” As the bhiksu was greedy 
for food, he wished to eat more. So he blew on the gruel to make it
cool. This he did once or twice, and then he said to the upddhydya,
“I have cooled it down.” Upagupta said, “Although you could cool 
the milk gruel, your mind is hot with the fire of desire and love. 
You should also cool the heat of your greediness and wash away 
the heat in your mind with the water of the contemplation of 
impurity. If you are fond of food and drink, you should consider 
them as if you were taking [them as] medicine.”
When the bhiksu had taken all the gruel, he vomited it and 
filled up the empty vessel. Upagupta said, ‘You should eat it 
up.” The bhiksu said to the upddhydya, “This vomit is unclean; 
how can I eat it?” Upagupta said again, ‘You should now contemplate that all things are impure like snot and spittle.” Then 
Upagupta preached the Dharma to him, and after hearing the 
Dharma the bhiksu diligently practiced meditation and attained 
arhatship. He took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of Contentment with Few Desires
There was a good man in southern India who became a monk in 
the Buddha-dharma and was contented, with few desires, taking 
no delight in earthly glory, never rubbing his body with ghee, never 
bathing in warm water, and never eating ghee, for he was always 
in fear of rebirth. As his constitution was weak in the four elements, he did not gain the Holy Way. He thought in his mind, “Who 
can preach the Dharma to me?” Then he heard that in the country 
of Mathura there was a bhiksu by the name of Upagupta whom the 
Buddha had predicted would be the foremost among his disciples 
in edifying others. So he went to him and worshipped him with 
hands joined palm to palm, saying, “Most Virtuous One, the 
Buddha has entered nirvana, and you, Most Virtuous One, are 
performing the Buddha’s functions. May you preach the Dharma 
i65b to me.” Upagupta saw that it was his last reincarnation and that 
he feared rebirth. He contemplated again why he did not gain the 
Holy Way, and he saw that he was weak in his four elements, and 
so he always took delight in crudeness and simplicity and did not
wish for earthly glory. Upagupta said to him, “Good man, you 
should follow my instructions, and I shall preach the Dharma to 
you.” “Let it be so,” was the reply. In order to edify him, Upagupta 
asked the lay supporters to prepare various foods and drinks and 
baths for the monks. He also said to a young bhiksu, “You should 
help this bhiksu to take a bath.” The young bhiksu then rubbed the 
man’s body with ghee and bathed him in warm water. At mealtime, 
different kinds of delicious food were provided for him, and the 
bhiksu finished all the food. In a few days, when his body had 
gained strength, Upagupta preached the Dharma to him. Through 
energetic meditation the bhiksu attained arhatship, and then he 
took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of the Raksasas
In the country of Mathura there was a man who asked permission 
of his parents to become a monk. He went to Upagupta, and upon 
reaching him he worshipped at his feet and said, “Most Virtuous 
One, may I renounce my home to become a fully ordained bhiksu
in the Buddha-dharma? I wish to live a pure life of celibacy in the 
Dharma of the World-honored One.” Upagupta saw that he was 
bound to his body by affection and said, “Welcome, I shall make 
you a monk.” Having heard these words, that man worshipped at 
the Elder’s feet and intended to go back home. On the way he 
thought, “If I reach home I might be detained and not allowed to 
become a monk.” Midway there was a Deva temple, and so he went 
in to spend the night there. Upagupta produced two Raksasas by 
his supernatural powers, one of whom carried a corpse into the 
temple and the other of whom went in empty-handed. In the 
temple the two of them contended for the corpse. One said, “I 
obtained this corpse.” The other one also said, “I obtained this 
corpse.” In this manner the two Raksasas competed with each 
other for the corpse without coming to a decision. They asked the 
man, ‘Who carried this corpse into the temple?” The man reflected, 
“If I tell the truth, then the one who came in empty-handed will
certainly kill me. If I do not tell the truth, the one who came with 
the corpse will kill me. But I would rather die than tell a lie.” So 
he said to the devils, “He carried it here.” The devil who came 
empty-handed grasped his arm and intended to eat him, but the 
devil who came with the corpse helped him to free himself from the 
grip. The devil [who came in without the corpse] again got hold of 
his foot and intended to eat him, and the devil who came in with 
the corpse again helped him to free himself from the hold. In this 
manner they struggled for a long time until sunrise.
Two days later, the man came to Upagupta, and upon reaching 
there he was made a monk. He practiced the Way diligently and 
165c attained arhatship. Then he took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of the Tree
In the country of south India there was a good man who became a 
monk in the Buddha-dharma but was bound to his body by a 
feeling of affection. He rubbed his body with ghee, bathed it in 
warm water, and nourished it with various kinds of food and drink. 
As he was so much attached to his body, he could not attain the 
Holy Way. So he thought, ‘Who can preach the Dharma to me?” 
When he heard that in the country of Mathura there was a bhiksu
named Upagupta, who had been predicted by the Buddha to be 
the foremost among his disciples in edifying others, he went to 
Upagupta in the country of Mathura. Upon arriving there he 
worshipped at his feet and said, “Most Virtuous One, the Buddha 
has entered nirvana, and you, Most Virtuous One, should perform 
the Buddha’s functions and preach the Dharma to me.”
Upagupta saw that this was the man’s last body in reincarnation and that he was bound to it by a feeling of affection; and he 
said, “Good man, if you can accept my instruction, I shall preach 
it to you.” “Let it be so,” was the reply. Upagupta then brought him 
to the mountains, where he produced a big tree by his supernatural powers, and he said, “You should climb up this big tree.” 
The bhiksu then climbed up the tree. Under the tree a large pit one
thousand cubits in depth and width was also produced by miraculous power. Upagupta said to the bhiksu again, “Put down your feet 
one by one.” The bhiksu accepted the instruction and put down his 
feet. He said again, “Let go of one hand.” This the bhiksu did as he 
was instructed. He said again, “Let go of the other hand.” The 
bhiksu said in reply, “If I let go of the other hand, I shall drop into 
the pit and die.” Upagupta said, “You have agreed with me that you 
will accept all my instructions. Why do you not accept my words 
now?”
At that moment the affection of the bhiksu for his body vanished, and when he let go his hand and dropped down, he did 
not see any pit under the tree. Upagupta preached the Dharma to 
him, and he diligently practiced meditation. Thereupon he 
attained the fruition of arhatship. Then he took a chip and put it 
into the cave.
The Causes of a Miser
In the country of Mathura there was a good man who became a 
monk at the place where Upagupta was, but he was a great miser. 
Due to his stinginess he could not gain the Holy Way. Upagupta 
said to him, ‘You should practice almsgiving. As you have now 
become a monk and have obtained the principal matter, there is no 
need for you to seek anything else. You should also offer the 
Dharma to others. Even the food and drink you have received in 
your begging bowl should be given to others as alms. If you cannot 
give extensively, you should share the food the moment you receive 
it with the two persons sitting beside you.” On account of his 
illiberality, the man did not share his food with others for one day 
and even for two days. The two persons who sat beside him were 
both arhats. Only on the third day, when he had received a large 
amount of food and drink, did he share it with the two persons. 
Then Upagupta edified him by preaching the Dharma to him, and 
through meditation he attained arhatship. Then he took a chip and 
put it into the cave.
The Causes of the Ghost
Once in the country of Mathura there was a good man who became 
a monk at the place where Upagupta was, but he was fond of 
sleeping. Upagupta preached the Dharma to him and brought him 
to a forest, where he fell asleep in the course of practicing meditation under a tree. In order to frighten him, Upagupta transformed 
himself into a ghost with seven heads. Holding the branch of a tree, 
he suspended the ghost’s body in the air before the bhiksu, who 
was startled from sleep and had a great fear of it. He rose from his 
seat and returned to his original place, but Upagupta ordered him 
to go back to the place of meditation. The bhiksu said, “Upadhyaya,
in that forest there is a ghost with seven heads holding the branch 
of a tree and suspending its body in the air before me in a very 
fearful manner.” Upagupta said, “Bhiksu, there is nothing fearful 
in the ghost. What is most fearful is the mind of sleepiness. If a 
bhiksu is killed by a ghost, he will not enter rebirth, but if he is 
killed by sleepiness, he will experience endless birth and death.” 
The bhiksu then returned to the place of meditation and saw the 
ghost again. As he feared the ghost, he dared not sleep. Then the 
bhiksu diligently practiced meditation and attained arhatship. So 
he took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of Being Bitten by Vermin
Once in the country of Mathura there was a good man who became 
a monk at the place where Upagupta was. Upagupta preached the 
Dharma to him, and the bhiksu practiced meditation diligently 
with the intention of just gaining the fruition of a srota-apanna. As 
he was not indolent in his practice, he might be able to rid himself 
of the fear of being born in the evil ways of existence and then 
i66b would be reborn seven times in the heavens and seven times 
among human beings. Then, after having enjoyed the bliss of men 
and heavenly beings, he would enter nirvana. Having perceived 
his intention, Upagupta went with him to the country of Mathura
to collect alms from house to house. They came to the house of a 
candala (outcaste), whose son had gained the fruition of a srotaapanna but suffered from a nasty disease; his whole body was 
bitten by vermin, and he had foul breath. Upagupta said to his 
disciple, “Look at this child. Though he is a srota-apanna, he still 
suffers such pains.” And he uttered the following stanza:
Born in the caste of candalas,
Attached to the pleasures of the three realms,
With vermin biting his body,
He loved pleasure freely, and so
He fell into the pains of the three realms.
Look at this son of the Buddha.
He has gained the Way
And was able to overthrow the three evil ways;
But as he was idle and thoughtless,
He was born in the caste of candalas.
You should not cherish such an idea
But should meditate upon the pains of the three realms.
In order to free you from such pains,
I am obliged to tell you 
That you should be energetic,
So that you may gain freedom.
Birth and death are insubstantial,
Like a grove of banana trees.
The bhiksu inquired, saying, ‘What were the deeds by which this 
person attained the stage of a srota-apanna but has to suffer 
such pains?” Upagupta said in reply, “In a previous life, he became 
a monk in the Dharma of Sakyamuni Buddha, and he was a 
karmadana while the monks were sitting in meditation. Among 
the monks there was an arhat who suffered from such a malignant 
disease that he scratched noisily. The karmadana said to him, ‘Is 
your body being eaten by vermin so that you are making such a 
noise?’ He took the arhat by the arm and led him out, saying, ‘Go 
to the room for candalasV At that time, the arhat said to the 
karmadana, ‘Good man, be diligent and do not stay in rebirth to
suffer its pains.’ Then the karmadana repented, and after his 
repentance he attained the fruition of a srota-apanna. So he 
thought to himself, ‘I have now attained the fruition of a srotaapanna, and there is no need to be energetic any more.’ The child 
today is the karmadana of the past. As he scolded the arhat, took 
him out, and sent him to the place for candalas, he is now receiving 
the retribution.”
When the bhiksu heard about this matter, he had deep fear 
and cultivated devotion diligently, whereby he attained the fruition of arhatship. Upagupta also converted the candala’s son, who 
abhorred the Kamadhatu (the Realm of Desire) and attained the 
fruition of an andgamin. Thereupon he passed away and was 
reborn in the five Pure Dwelling heavens. A chip was taken and 
put into the cave.
The Causes of Contemplation on a Skeleton
In the country of Mathura, there was a good man who became a 
monk at the place where Upagupta was. Upagupta taught him the 
contemplation of impurity and so on, and by the contemplation of 
impurity he suppressed his passions so that they could not arise. 
He thought that he had done what was to be done and that there 
was no need to be energetic any more. Upagupta said, “Good man, 
you should be energetic; do not be idle and negligent.” [The monk] 
said in reply, “I have done what is to be done and have attained 
arhatship.” Upagupta said, “Good man, have you seen the woman 
wine seller named Stonecutter who lives in the domain of the 
country of Gandhara? This woman claims to have gained the Way, 
just as you do, and says that her passions have been cut off while 
they are not cut off. This is undue self-conceit. You should observe 
whether this woman has gained the Way or not.” The bhiksu said, 
“I cannot see her.” He wished to go to that country, and his teacher 
gave him permission.
The bhiksu came within the domain of the country of Gandhara, 
where there was a monastery with the name of Earth-stone,
and he went into the monastery to take rest. He rose early 
in the morning, put on his robe, carried his alms bowl, and 
entered the village to collect food. The wine selling woman took 
out some food and intended to give it to the bhiksu, but at the 
sight of the woman his mind was excited by lustful desire. He 
took some grits and butter out of his own alms bowl to give 
them to the woman. At the sight of him, the woman’s mind 
was also excited by lustful desire, and she smiled, revealing her 
teeth. Before touching her body or even exchanging a word 
with her, the bhiksu’s mind was excited. But when he saw the 
woman smiling and revealing her teeth, he contemplated impurity and perceived that her whole body was nothing but a skeleton. After making this contemplation, he attained arhatship. 
Having done what was to be done, he uttered the following 
stanza:
An idiot is ignorant;
On seeing external beauty,
He craves it with attachment.
A man who has wisdom 
Perceives the internal ugliness 
And may obtain liberation.
The ignorant one is bound 
By outward appearance.
One who is wise is not bound 
By external appearance.
From now onward this body 
Should be given up as impure.
Never again on this body 
Add any more ornament.
Observe the reality of the body,
And you may gain deliverance.
The bhiksu returned to Upagupta in the country of Mathura, and 
Upagupta asked him, “Did you see that woman?” [The bhiksu] said 
in reply, “I saw her according to the Dharma.” Then he took a chip 
and put it into the cave.
The Causes of Avarice
i67a In the country of Mathura there was a householder who was 
enormously rich at the beginning but gradually became poor afterwards, having only five hundred silver coins in his possession. He 
thought in his mind, “I wish to become a monk in order to cultivate 
the Way in the Buddha-dharma. In case I need medicine and robes 
after becoming a monk, I may use this money to purchase them.” 
So he went to become a monk at the place of Upagupta and ordered 
his servant to guard the money every day. Upagupta said, “Good 
man, according to the Dharma of becoming a monk, one should be 
contented and with little desire. What is the use of these five 
hundred silver coins? You should offer them to the Sangha.” The 
bhiksu said in reply, “This is the money for me to buy medicine and 
the three robes.” Upagupta asked him to go into his room, where 
he produced by miraculous power one thousand silver coins, and 
said to him, “This money is given to you for buying medicine and 
the three robes.” When the bhiksu heard this, he gave up his five 
hundred silver coins as alms to the Sangha. Upagupta preached 
the Dharma to him. The bhiksu then practiced meditation diligently and attained arhatship, and so he took a chip and put it into 
the cave.
The Causes of a Bamboo Brush
In the country of Mathura there was a good man who became a 
monk to cultivate the Way at the place where Upagupta was. 
Upagupta preached the Dharma to him, and the bhiksu practiced 
meditation diligently, attaining the fruition of a srota-apanna. So 
he thought in his mind, “I have overturned the evil ways of 
existence and have done what ought to be done.” Upagupta said, 
“Good man, you should be energetic; do not be idle and negligent.” 
The bhiksu said in reply, “I have already attained the fruition of a 
srota-apanna and have overturned the evil ways of existence. I 
shall not be idle and negligent again but shall be reborn seven
times in the heavens and seven times among human beings to 
enjoy the bliss of men and heavenly beings, and then I shall enter 
nirvana.”
Wishing to arouse his fear [of rebirth], Upagupta rose early in 
the morning, put on his robe, took up his alms bowl, and went with 
the bhiksu to the country of Mathura to collect food from house to 
house. They came to the house of a candala, whose son was a 
srota-apanna but suffered from a malignant ulcer. The physician 
said to him, “You should brush the ulcer with a bamboo brush to 
make it bleed, and I shall apply medicine to the wound.” Upon 
hearing this advice, the man brushed his body often every day with 
a bamboo brush. On seeing this sight, Upagupta showed it to his 
disciple and said, “Good man, did you see this srota-apanna suffering from such pains?” The bhiksu said in reply, “Upadhyaya, what 
were the deeds that produced such pains?”
Upagupta said in reply, “This person became a monk in the
/ _
Dharma of right enlightenment of Sakyamuni Buddha. There was 
then a bhiksu who acted as a karmadana to supervise those who 
were sitting in meditation. Among the monks there was an arhat 
who came to sit in meditation at the place for meditation; and as 
i67b he suffered from scabies, he scratched himself. The karmadana
said to him, ‘Most Virtuous One, why don’t you take a bamboo 
brush to brush your body so that you can make a noise?’ He took 
him by the hand and led him out of the place for meditation, 
saying, You ought to go to the house of a candala and not disturb 
the monks!’ The arhat said in reply, ‘Good man, you should be 
energetic; do not be idle and negligent so that you suffer the pains 
of birth and death.’ Upon hearing these words, the karmadana
repented before the Most Virtuous One, and when he had repented 
he attained the fruition of a srota-apanna. The bhiksu then thought 
in his mind, ‘I have overturned the evil ways of existence, and 
there is no need to be energetic any more.’ ”
Upagupta said to his disciple, “The karmadana at the place of 
meditation in a previous life is now this candala’s son. Because he 
said to the arhat in his former life, ‘Why don’t you brush your body 
with a bamboo brush?’ he is now receiving this retribution that
requires him to brush his body with a bamboo brush today. In his 
former life he also said to the Most Virtuous One, “You should go 
to the house of a candala.’ Thus he was born in the caste of 
candalas in his present life.” When Upagupta’s disciple heard 
these words, he had fear in his mind. He practiced meditation 
diligently and attained arhatship.
Upagupta also preached the Dharma to the candala’s son, 
who abhorred the Kamadhatu. He attained the fruition of an 
anagamin, whereupon he passed away and was reborn in the five 
Pure Dwelling heavens. A chip was taken and put into the cave.
The Causes of Parental Sentiment
In the country of Mathura there was a householder to whom a son 
was born; but the child died at the age of one. He was reborn in the 
house of another householder and died at the age of two. He was 
again reborn in the house of still another householder and died at 
the age of three. In this manner he was reborn in a fourth, fifth, 
sixth, and seventh place. At the seventh place he had lived to 
the age of seven when a thug kidnapped him and took him to the 
mountains. Upagupta saw in contemplation that this was the 
last reincarnation of the child, and in order to convert him he went 
to the mountains and sat cross-legged. There he produced by 
miraculous power the four divisions of troops—elephants, horses, 
chariots, and footmen. As the thug was frightened, he went to 
Upagupta who, withdrawing his miraculous power, preached the 
Dharma to him. Upon hearing the Dharma, the thug perceived 
the four noble truths and became a monk. He practiced the Way in 
the Buddha-dharma and handed over the child to Upagupta. 
Upagupta asked the child to renounce his home and preached the 
Dharma to edify him. Through the diligent practice of meditation 
the child attained arhatship.
Having gained sainthood, he contemplated and saw that his 
parents were in great distress. So he returned to his parents and 
said, “Parents, do not be distressed.” On seeing that their son had
come back, the parents were greatly delighted. The child arhat 
167c preached the Dharma to his parents until they attained the fruition of srota-apannas. Then he went to his sixth parents and 
said to them, “Parents, do not be worried. I was your son, once born 
and reared by you, and died at the age of six.” His parents were 
greatly delighted to hear this, and when he had preached the 
Dharma to them, they attained the fruition of srota-apannas. In 
this manner he preached the Dharma and edified his fifth, fourth, 
third, second, and first parents until all of them attained the 
fruitions of srota-apannas. Then he took a chip and put it into the 
cave.
The Causes of the River
In the country of Mathura there was a good man who became 
a monk at the place where Upagupta was, and as Upagupta 
preached the Dharma to him he cultivated himself diligently and 
attained the four stages of dhyana. When he reached the first 
stage of dhyana, he had the impression of being a srota-apanna; at 
the second stage of dhyana, he had the impression of being a 
sakrdagamin; at the third stage of dhyana, he had the impression 
of being an anagamin) and at the fourth stage of dhyana, he had 
the impression of being an arhat. He then became unenergetic. 
Upagupta said to him, “Good man, be diligent and never be idle 
and indolent.” The disciple said, “I have done what is to be done 
and have attained the fruition of an arhat.”
Then Upagupta, edifying him in an expedient way, said, “Good 
man, you may go to the country of Central India.” The bhiksu went 
there accordingly, and midway on his journey Upagupta produced 
by miraculous power five hundred merchants who were making 
a pleasure trip in the mountains, while he also produced five 
hundred robbers coming to kill the merchants. The bhiksu was 
greatly frightened when he saw that the robbers were coming to 
kill him, and then he thought, “I am not an arhat. If I were an 
arhat, I would have no fear. I may be an anagamin.”
Among the merchants there was the daughter of a householder who had lost her companion and had no friend. Upon seeing 
the bhiksu, she worshipped at his feet and said to him, “May the 
holy person take me along and travel with me.” The bhiksu said, 
“The World-honored One has made a rule that [a monk] should not 
travel with a woman alone. You may follow me at a distance as far 
as if I were a lion.” Upagupta then produced a big river, and the 
bhiksu, intending to cross the river, waded through the water at 
the lower reaches of the stream, while the woman waded through 
the water at the upper reaches. When the bhiksu saw that the 
woman was nearly drowning in the middle of the river, he thought, 
“The World-honored One permitted a monk to drag a woman out 
of the water when she was about to be drowned; he does not 
commit an offense thereby.” Having thought so, he pulled her out 
of the water, and when the woman had been pulled out, a lustful 
desire was aroused in his mind. Then he thought again, “I am not 
an anagamin. An anagamin is free from lustful desire. I may be a 
sakrddgamin or a srota-dpanna.” When the woman was brought 
168a ashore, he thought, “Now I wish to cast away all the disciplinary 
rules to cohabit with this woman.”
Upagupta withdrew his miraculous power and stood before 
the bhiksu, saying, “Good man, are you an arhat?” At that time the 
bhiksu repented in the presence of Upagupta, who preached the 
Dharma to him. The bhiksu practiced meditation diligently and 
attained arhatship, and then he took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of a Whim in Meditation
In the country of Mathura there was the son of a householder. Not 
long after he had taken over the family properties, he said to his 
parents, “Permit me to become a monk.” Upagupta made him a 
monk and preached the Dharma to him, asking him to go to the 
mountains to sit in meditation. The bhiksu accepted the instruction and went to the mountains, where he sat cross-legged under 
a tree. Before becoming a monk, the bhiksu had a wife with regular
features, and when he was sitting in meditation, he thought of his 
former wife. Upagupta transformed himself into the form of the 
bhiksu’s ex-wife and stood before him. Upon seeing the transformation, the bhiksu said to her, “Why did you come?” The woman 
said in reply, “You called for me.” The bhiksu said, “I was sitting 
here and never said anything. How could I have called for you?” 
The woman said in reply, ‘You called for me mentally while in 
meditation for enlightenment though not orally.” The woman then 
uttered the following stanza:
A shameful thing is of two kinds,
One is oral and one is in the mind.
Of these two kinds,
A mental shame is worse.
Without awareness in the mind,
There could be no oral utterance.
Upagupta withdrew his miraculous power and returned to his own 
form, and standing before the bhiksu he uttered the following 
stanza:
If you were not delighted 
To look at that woman,
And did not wish to see her,
You would not think of her.
If you have relinquished desire,
You should take no such delight.
What one has vomited 
One should never eat again.
Upagupta further preached the Dharma [for the bhiksu], who 
practiced meditation diligently and attained arhatship. Then he 
uttered the following stanza:
The upadhyaya has seen reality 
And has edified me.
As I venerated him,
I have gained the Holy Way.
Then he took a chip and put it into the cave
The Causes of the Cowherds
i68b Once Upagupta was going to the country of Central India, and 
on the way there he saw five hundred cowherds. Upon seeing 
Upagupta, the five hundred cowherds went to him, and Upagupta 
preached the Dharma to them. When they had heard the Dharma, 
they perceived the four noble truths. Thus they offered their cows 
to Upagupta and became monks at his place, practicing the Way. 
Upagupta preached the Dharma to them, and all of them attained 
arhatship. They took chips and put them into the cave.
The Causes of the Transformed Person
In the country of Mathura there was a good man who became a 
monk at the place where Upagupta was in order to practice the 
Way. Upagupta preached the Dharma to him, and after having 
heard the Dharma, he reached the four stages of worldly dhyana.
At the first stage of dhyana, he had the impression of being a 
srota-apanna; at the second stage of dhyana, he had the impression of being a sakrdagamin; at the third stage of dhyana, he had 
the impression of being an anagamin; and at the fourth stage of 
dhyana, he had the impression of being an arhat, saying, “I have 
done what is to be done.” And so he became idle and indolent 
and was no longer energetic. Upagupta said to him, “You should 
be energetic; do not be lazy and negligent.” The bhiksu said in 
reply, “I have done what is to be done and have even attained 
arhatship.”
Upagupta asked him to go to the mountains to sit in meditation, and he also transformed himself into another bhiksu in order 
to sit with him in meditation and give him advice. [Upagupta as] 
the transformed bhiksu taught him the methods of meditation and 
also asked him, ‘Who accepted you to become a monk, and who is 
your upadhyaya?” The bhiksu said in reply, “Upagupta is my 
upadhyaya, and he accepted me as a monk.” The transformed 
bhiksu said, “It is a great merit for you to have Upagupta, a
Buddha without the characteristic marks of a Buddha, for your 
teacher.” He also inquired, “What scriptures are you reading and 
reciting? From the Sutras, the Vinaya, and the matrka (Abhidharma) have you gained anything of the Buddha-dharma?” The 
bhiksu answered, saying, “I have attained the fruition of a srotaapanna and even arhatship.” The transformed person asked again, 
“By which way did you attain them?” The bhiksu said in reply, “I 
attained them by the worldly way.” The transformed person said, 
“What you have attained is but the way of worldly truth. You have 
not gained the Holy Way.”
Upon hearing these words, the bhiksu was deeply vexed with 
grief. So he went to Upagupta and said to his upadhyaya, “I am 
but an ordinary person. May the upadhyaya preach the Dharma 
to me.” Upagupta accordingly preached the Dharma to him, and 
through diligent practice of meditation the bhiksu attained arhatship. He took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of Taking No Delight
in the Dwelling Place
168c In the country of Mathura there was the son of a householder. Not 
long after he had taken over the family properties, he cherished 
the desire to become a monk and said to his parents, “Permit me 
to become a monk to practice the Way.” His parents said in reply, 
“We have no child except you. We are still living, so how can you 
leave us behind to become a monk?” When the son heard what his 
parents had said he was vexed with grief, and for six days he 
refused to take food. Then his parents permitted him to become a 
monk and said to him, “When you have become a monk, you should 
come to see us frequently.” He said in reply, “Let it be so,” and went 
to Upagupta to become a monk. After having become a monk, he 
thought to himself, “I have previously promised my parents that 
after becoming a monk I would go to see them frequently.” So he 
said to his upadhyaya that he was going to his parents. When he 
saw that his former wife, who was vexed and despondent on
account of him, did not adorn herself with ornaments, the bhiksu
said to her, “I shall give up the disciplinary rules and return home.” 
He went again to the place of Upagupta, and after worshipping at 
his feet, he said, “Upadhyaya, I single-mindedly desire to give up 
the disciplinary rules and return to my own place.” Upagupta said, 
“Good man, do not think so. Wait for some time. I wish to know 
your intention, and when your intention is satisfied, you may give 
up the disciplinary rules.”
Then he ordered him to go to the country of Mathura, and he 
transformed himself into the corpse of the bhiksu’s former wife 
being carried by four persons out of that country. The bhiksu was 
then going back to see his parents when he saw a corpse being 
carried out midway [on his journey]. He asked the corpse bearers, 
“Who is this person?” They said in reply, “This is the corpse of the 
wife of so-and-so, the son of a householder, who recently became a 
monk. She died of vexation and despondence. We are removing it 
to the sitavana (cemetery).” Having heard this, the bhiksu went 
with them, wishing to see the body. Upagupta caused the corpse to 
emit many worms and blood. Upon seeing this sight, the bhiksu
entered into the contemplation of impurity, and through diligent 
practice of meditation he attained arhatship. When he had done 
what was to be done, he went to Upagupta and worshipped at his 
feet. Upagupta said, “Did you see your wife?” He answered, saying, 
“I saw her in accordance with the Dharma.” Then he took a chip 
and put it into the cave.
The Causes of a Monk’s Pewter Staff
In the country of Mathura there was a good man who became a 
monk at the place where Upagupta was. Upagupta preached the 
Dharma to him, and after having heard the Dharma the bhiksu
gained the four stages of worldly dhyana. The bhiksu thought to 
himself, “I have done what is to be done. There is no need to be 
energetic any more.” Upagupta said to him, “Good man, you should 
be energetic; do not be lazy and negligent.” The bhiksu said in
reply, “Upadhyaya, I have done what is to be done and have 
attained arhatship.”
The upadhyaya ordered him to rise early in the morning, dress 
himself in his robes, hold his alms bowl, take up his pewter staff, 
and go into the presence of the monks before entering into the 
i69a country. There were then five hundred upasakas following behind 
him with food and drink in their hands. Upon seeing them, the bhiksu
knew that they respected him, and he claimed to be a man of superior 
merits. Thus he had a feeling of self-conceit, and then he reflected, 
“I am not an arhat. An arhat is free from the conception of ego and 
the possession of self-conceit.” So he went to the place of his 
upadhyaya, to whom he said, “I have not gained the Holy Way. May 
you preach the Dharma to me.” Upagupta accordingly preached the 
Dharma to him, and through the practice of meditation the bhiksu
attained arhatship. Then he took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of Sudarsana
In the country of Kasmira there was a bhiksu by the name of 
Sudarsana who had gained the four stages of worldly dhyana and 
was esteemed by the Naga king. Then a drought with scorching 
heat occurred in the country of Kasmira, and all the people asked 
the bhiksu to pray for rain. Upagupta reflected, “I wish to edify 
Sudarsana, and it is time now.” For the sake of expedient edification, Upagupta caused that there should be no rain for twelve 
years, and when the heretics saw this phenomenon they said to the 
people, “There will be rain [only] after the lapse of twelve years.” 
The people, being worried and distressed to hear these words, 
went to Upagupta and asked him to pray for rain. Upagupta said, 
“I should not pray for rain. In the country of Kasmira there is a 
bhiksu by the name of Sudarsana, and you may go to beseech him.” 
Then the people of Mathura sent a messenger to Sudarsana, 
asking him to pray for rain. As Sudarsana possessed the miraculous powers of the four stages of dhyana, he went to the country 
of Mathura by divine power, and the people [again] asked him to
pray for rain. Then Sudarsana prayed for rain, which poured down 
on the earth, filling the whole of Jambudvipa. The people thought, 
“Since the bhiksu Sudarsana was able to cause such a torrential 
rain, he is superior to Upagupta.”
At that time, Sudarsana, followed by many people, was going 
out of the country of Mathura, while Upagupta, followed by a few 
people, was coming into the country of Mathura. When the bhiksu
Sudarsana saw that many people were following him while only a 
few people were following Upagupta, he had a feeling of selfconceit, and then he reflected, “I am not an arhat. An arhat should 
have no self-conceit.” So he went to the place of Upagupta, and 
upon arriving there he worshipped at his feet and said, “The 
Buddha has entered nirvana. Most Virtuous One, you are performing the Buddha’s functions. May you preach the Dharma to me.” 
Upagupta said, “You are not keeping the precepts in the right way 
as taught by the Buddha, and you claimed superiority over me, 
giving rise to arrogance and self-conceit. Where did the Buddha 
say that he allowed his bhiksus to pray for rain?” Upagupta 
preached the Dharma to him, and upon hearing the Dharma the 
bhiksu diligently practiced meditation and attained arhatship. So 
he took a chip and put it into the cave.
The Causes of the Fief for a Monastery
Upagupta constructed not one but a hundred monasteries in the 
country of Mathura. At that time the king of Mathura was named 
Citraketu, a man who had no faith but troubled and disturbed the 
monks as well as their attendants and almsgivers. Then the 
innumerable monks together with their attendants and almsgivers went to Upagupta and told him about this matter. Upagupta 
reflected, “If I send a messenger to inform King Asoka, he might 
be angry and would certainly kill this king. I must go in person.” 
By miraculous power, Upagupta suddenly disappeared in a wink 
from Natabhatika Monastery and reached Kukkuta Monastery in 
the city of Pataliputra.
Upon hearing that Upagupta was coming, King Asoka decorated the frontier with incense and flowers, arranged dancers and 
musicians with various kinds of adornment, and went with his 
ministers and people of the country to welcome Upagupta. When 
he arrived there, he worshipped at the monk’s feet and, with hands 
joined palm to palm reverentially, said to him, “Most Virtuous One, 
why do you come here?” The monk said in reply, “It is for some 
matter that I have come to Your Majesty.” The king inquired again, 
“What matter?” The Most Virtuous One said in reply, ‘Your Majesty has widely propagated the Buddha-dharma and has constructed not one but a hundred monasteries in the country of 
Mathura. The reigning King Citraketu of that country has no faith 
but troubles and disturbs the Buddha-dharma. It befits Your 
Majesty to ask him to protect the Buddha-dharma.” King Asoka 
then ordered his minister Radhagupta, saying, You will dispatch 
a man immediately to kill that king.” Upagupta said to King 
[Asoka], “Do not kill that king. Let Your Majesty just instruct him 
not to trouble and disturb the Buddha-dharma again henceforward.”
King Asoka then wrote a letter with his own hands, marked 
it with his teeth, and handed it to a Raksasa. After taking the 
letter, the Raksasa instantly reached that country. King Citraketu 
received the letter respectfully and read it, and after reading the 
letter he struck a drum and made an announcement that thenceforth all people in the country should not trouble or disturb the 
Buddha-dharma.
King Asoka inquired of Upagupta, “Which monastery has 
been disturbed by theft and robbery?” Upagupta said in reply, 
“Natabhatika Monastery.” Then King Asoka wrote a document 
with his own hands to the effect that land was bestowed upon that 
monastery as a fief for its support. He marked it with his teeth and 
gave it to Upagupta. Then King Asoka prepared various kinds 
of offerings, and after having accepted the offerings Upagupta 
suddenly disappeared from Kukkuta Monastery and returned to 
Natabhatika Monastery.
The Causes of Dhitika
Upagupta contemplated whether Dhitika was born or not and saw 
i69c that he was not yet bom. Thenceforth he went to the place of 
[Dhitika’s] parents every day. One day he went to their house with 
many b h ik s u s , another day he went there with only two b h ik s u s ,
and on still another day he went alone. The householder, seeing 
that Upagupta came alone to his house, asked him, “Holy man, 
why do you not have any disciples following you?” The elder said 
in reply, “I have no disciple.” The householder said, “I take delight 
in living at home and would not like to become a monk. If a son is 
born to me, I shall give him to you, Most Virtuous One, to be your 
disciple.”
Then a son was born to the householder, but he died shortly 
afterwards. When the second son was born, he also died soon. 
When the third son was born, he was named Dhitika and given to 
Upagupta to become a monk. Upagupta made him a fully ordained 
monk. At the moment of performing the first k a r m a n , he attained 
the fruition of a s r o ta -a p a n n a , and at the moment of performing 
the fourth k a r m a n , he attained arhatship. Upagupta reflected, “I 
have edified all those whom I should edify. This cave, which is 
eighteen cubits in length and twelve in breadth, is already filled 
up with chips four inches long. I should now enter nirvana.”
After thinking in this way, Upagupta handed over the Dharmap it a k a to Dhitika and said to him, “Good man, the World-honored 
One transmitted the Dharma-pito&a to Mahakasyapa and entered 
p a r i n i r v a n a ; Mahakasyapa transmitted the Dharma-p ita k a to 
Ananda and entered nirvana; Ananda transmitted the Dharmap it a k a to Madhyantika and entered nirvana; Madhyantika transmitted the Dharma-p jfa&a to my u p a d h y a y a and entered nirvana; 
and my u p a d h y a y a transmitted the Dharma -p ita k a to me. Now I 
wish to enter nirvana; you should safeguard and protect this 
Dharma-p ita k a .”
Seven days later, when Upagupta was about to enter nirvana, 
various heavenly beings made the matter known to all the people
in the whole of Jambudvlpa, among whom there were a hundred 
thousand arhats, while harmonious learners, energetic ordinary 
bhiksus, and white-clad lay people were innumerable and countless. When the time arrived for the nirvana of Upagupta, he rose 
up into the air by supernatural powers and made different kinds 
of miraculous transformations in the postures of walking, standing, sitting, and lying down. Then he entered the fire samadhi.
When he was in the samadhi, various colors—blue, yellow, red, 
and white—issued from his body. When water flowed out from the 
upper part of his body, fire spurted from the lower part; when 
water flowed out from the lower part, fire spurted from the upper 
part. With various divine powers he aroused a feeling of great 
happiness in the minds of his fellow monks and all human and 
heavenly beings and enabled them to gain emancipation. Then he 
entered nirvana, like a fire quenched by water. The chips collected 
were used to cremate his body, and a stupa was built to which 
offerings were made.
At the time of Upagupta’s nirvana, a thousand arhats also 
sacrificed their lives and entered nirvana. When Dhitika had 
safeguarded and protected the Dharma-pifo&a, he also entered 
nirvana.
This is the end of the Causes of Upagupta.
The right Dharma always abides 
For a long time without dying.
The stupa containing sariras
Will also last like this.
May the people who uphold the Dharma 
Enjoy happiness illimitable.
May they live in the same way,
Always abiding and imperishable.
From the “Causes of King Asoka” up to the nirvana of Upagupta, 
there are altogether thirty-one hundred verses, each consisting of 
thirty-two syllables in the foreign [text]. The number of disciples 
is twenty-eight persons.
Glossary
Abhidharma \pitaka]: the section of the Buddhist canon containing
philosophical commentaries
agrakulika: one of prominent family
airavata: a kind of tree
a m ra : mango
a n a ga m in : one never to be reborn on this earth
a psa ra s: a kind of goddess
arhat: one who has attained nirvana
aristaka: heron
Asura: a kind of demon, an evil spirit
aya ta n a : entrance
ba k u la: a kind of flower
bhiksu: Buddhist monk
bh ik su n i: Buddhist nun
bodhisattva: one destined for enlightenment
ca itya : shrine
cakravartin: universal monarch; emperor of the earth
ca n d a la: outcaste; wicked, butcher
candali: outcaste (f.)
Deva: god
dharanv. incantation
Dharmakaya: body of truth
Dharma-pitaka: collection of Buddhist texts
Dharmaraja: a Buddhist king
dh a tu : sphere
d h yd n a : trance
du skrta: misdeed or sin
eight precepts: (1) not to kill, (2) not to steal, (3) not to commit adultery,
(4) not to speak falsely, (5) not to drink intoxicants, (6 ) not to sing,
dance, or wear ornaments, (7) not to sit or sleep on a high bed, and
(8 ) not to eat after noon
Elder: Buddhist monk of many years’ standing
four noble truths: (1 ) life is suffering; (2 ) defilements are the cause of
suffering; (3) all suffering can be ended; (4) the way to end suffering
is the eightfold noble path (i.e., right view, right thought, right
speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness,
and right concentration)
ga n d h a -ja la : fragrant water
g a th a : stanza
h etu p ra tya ya: cause and subcause
ja m b u : a kind of tree
Jambudvipa: the world
Jataka stories: tales of the Buddha’s previous lives as a bodhisattva
ja ti: rebirth
jh a p ita : cremation
k a d a m ba : a kind of flower, N a n d ea ca dam ba
kalpa: immense period of time, aeon
Kamadhatu: realm of desire
karma: the consequences of a person’s past actions
k a rm ad an a: distributor of duties
k a rm a n : act of the ordination ceremony
Ksatriya: governmental caste, warrior caste; one of this caste
kulika: one of good family
k u m u d a : red lotus
Kunala: Asoka’s son
kutiala: a kind of bird
k u h k u m a: turmeric
kutaru-navaka\ new tent
la k sa: red dye
lakuca: glue
m a llik a: jasmine
m a n d a ra va : a kind of flower
m a n i: pearl
Mara: demon
m a trk a : See Abhidharma [pitaka]
Naga: dragon
n isid a n a : mat for sitting
p a ra jik a : “defeat,” ground for expulsion from the Sangh
p a tra : alms bowl
pippalv. a long pepper
p ita k a : collection of Buddhist texts
p ra tyek a b u d d h a: self-enlightened Buddha
p u n d a rlk a : white lotus
Raksasa: a kind of demon
Rupakaya: physical body of a Buddha
sakrddgdm irv. one who will return to the world once more before
enlightenment
sa m a d h i: deep trance
sarnghati robe: outer robe
sa n a : hempen (garment)
sa n a va sa : hempen garment
Sangha: Buddhist Order
sa rim : relic
six p a r a m ita s : six perfected virtues concerning giving, precept-keeping,
patience, effort, meditation, and wisdom
sk a n d h a s: aggregates
sra m a n a: Buddhist monk
srava ka : “hearer,” personal disciple of the Buddha
srota -a pa n n a: one who has “entered the stream” of contemplation
stupa: tope, reliquary
Sugata: the Buddha (“well-gone”)
Sutra: a discourse of the Buddha
tala: leaf
Tripitaka: Buddhist canon
U dan a and G a th a : sections of the Buddhist canon
u p a d h ya ya : teacher
upasaka: layman
upasika: laywoman
utpala: blue lotus
Vinaya: Buddhist monastic rules
Yaksa: a kind of devil
yoja n a : one day’s journey in an ox cart
---------------------------------------------------------------
Index
Abhidharma(s). See Tripitaka
Agrakulika, 5
Airavata, 142
Ajatasatru (king), 19, 99, 111-14, 118,
119, 122
Ajnatakaundinya (elder), 101
Akanistha heaven, 6, 44
Alms, 3, 15, 26, 37, 45, 47, 48, 54-56,
58, 60, 81, 82, 84-87,118, 153,
166,168,171
Almsgiver(s), 122,124,127, 159, 181
Almsgiving, 166
Almsreceivers, 124
Am ra (fruit), 83-86
Andgamin( s), 121, 134, 145, 154, 169,
173-75, 177
Ananda (second patriarch), 2, 7, 8, 21,
37, 91, 93, 94, 97, 98,100-4,107,
109,111-22, 124, 142,183
Anathapindada (elder), 44, 81
Anavatapta (lake), 41, 45
Aniruddha (elder), 95,142
Apalala (Naga king), 21, 91
Apsaras, 136
Aristaka, 116
Artisan, 161
Asadha (elder), 154
Aiioka (king), 1, 7, 9-15, 17-29,
31-43, 45-60, 63-70, 74-76, 78,
79, 81-87, 181, 182, 184.
Candasoka, 13
Dharmasoka, 20
-vardhana, 75
Asoka (tree), 13, 84
Asura(s), 22, 33, 41, 139
Ayatanas, 153
Bakula, 110
Bamboo Grove (monastery), 3, 99,
113-15
Barber, 8, 9
Bhadramukha (minister), 84
Bhadrayudha (army commander), 13
Bhallika (merchant), 32
Bhata (almsgiver), 91, 118, 127
Bhiksunïis), 44, 154-56
Bimbisàra (king), 33
Bindusàra (king), 8
Birth and death, 5, 6, 53, 94, 101, 158,
167,168, 172
Blessedness, field of, 5, 7, 26, 35, 41, 84
Bodhisattva, 7, 29-32
Bodhi tree, 31, 32, 39, 40, 46, 47, 139
Brhaddhanus (king), 1
Bull king, 7, 17, 94
Caitya(s), 110
Cakravartin, 5-8, 11, 17, 26, 44, 45
Campa (city), 8
Candagirika (warden), 14-16, 18
Canddlais), 21, 71, 168, 169, 172, 173
Candàlî, 39, 40
Candâsoka. See Asoka (king)
Candragupta (king), 1, 8
Chandaka (groom), 30
Citraketu (king), 181, 182
Compassion, 5, 17, 32, 33, 41, 70, 78,
109, 119, 122, 123, 126, 127,
139-41, 145, 147, 153
Corpse(s), 29, 66, 131, 133, 137, 138,
141, 142,164, 165,179
Cow(s), 3, 8, 31, 58, 59, 177
Cowherd(s), 59, 177
Deer, 49, 60, 79
Deer Park, 33, 101
Desire(s), five, 53, 57, 128, 132,149
Deva(s), 22, 29, 41, 66, 93, 94, 164
Devaraksita (merchant), 153-55, 157
Devàtideva, 29
Dhâranï, 2
Dharma
general of. See Sâriputra
good, 66, 105, 134
holy, 125, 145, 153
King, 20, 45, 73, 76
right/true, 7, 15, 17, 83, 95,112,
113, 125, 136, 144, 146, 184
supreme, 57
Wheel of, 29, 33, 34, 39, 81, 110
Dharmakaya, 37, 102, 141
Dharma (non-Buddhist), 30, 49, 59
Dharma-pifa&a. See Tripitaka
Dharmaraja
Buddha, 76
Monastery, 88
stupas, 45
Dharmasoka. See Asoka (king)
Dharmavivardhana. See Kunala
Dhatus, 153
Dhitika (sixth patriarch), 2,107,108,
151,183,184
Dhrtarastra (heavenly king). See Four
Heavenly Kings
Dhyana, 29, 41, 174, 177, 179, 180
Dragon(s), 139, 156. See also Naga(s)
Dream, 69, 70, 75, 113, 119
Drum, 23,182
Duskrta, 103, 104
Earth-stone (monastery), 169
Ego, 53, 147,158, 180
Egolessness. See Non-ego
Elephant(s), 3, 6, 9, 22, 24, 29, 54, 75,
97, 99, 113, 119, 142, 173
king, 3, 31
Emancipation, 15, 49, 53, 55, 56,146,
147, 184
Enlightenment, 6-8, 29, 32, 39, 40, 92,
98, 102, 109, 110, 113, 172, 176
Executioner, 13, 51, 52
Faith(s), 27, 39, 48, 49, 81, 99, 109,
140, 142, 147,154, 181, 182
four, 136
Four Heavenly Kings, 6, 32, 93-95, 138
Four noble truths, 57, 74, 80, 134,
136, 145, 159, 173, 177
Fruit(s), 5, 36, 38, 58, 72, 116,140,
143, 149, 155
Fruition(s), 72,121, 134,135, 145,147,
148, 155,166-69, 171-74,178, 183
Funan, 2, 20
Gandha-jala, 48
Gandhamadana, Mount, 41
Gandhara, 169
Ganges, 83,119, 121
Garlic, 68
Gatekeeper, 56, 74
Gatha, 3, 100
Gautama, 98, 104, 120
Gavampati, 95-97
Ghost with seven heads, 167
Girika. See Candagirika (warden)
Gopalacandala (Naga king), 91
Gorasa (elder), 148
Great Cream Mountain. See
Urumanda Mountain
Greed, 129
Gunabhadra, 2
Gupta (perfumer), 21, 91, 118, 128,
129, 135
Hatred, 3, 55, 77, 78,116, 129
Hell(s), 5, 6, 14, 15, 18, 52, 60, 79
eight, 5
Heretic(s), 9, 32, 33, 44, 49, 50, 58, 59,
96, 104, 145, 180
Heron, 116
Hetupratyaya, 153
Horse(s), 3, 22, 29, 30, 119, 130, 173
Hungry ghost(s), 6, 52
Hunter, 30, 60, 79
Ignorance, 16, 95, 102, 117, 119, 129,
139
Impermanence, 6, 52, 53, 72, 84-86,
108, 113, 143
Impurity(-ies), 117, 130,132, 133, 139,
163, 169, 170, 179
India, 130, 148, 149, 152, 163, 165,
174, 177
Jambu, 29
Jambudvlpa, 8, 14, 84, 85, 95-97, 107,
157, 181, 184
Jataka stories, 151
Jati, 116
Jhdpita, 108
Jin dynasty, 1
Kadamba, 42, 140
Kalika (Naga king), 31, 32
Kalpai s), 104, 143, 157
Kamadhatu, 169, 173
Kancanamala (Kunala’s wife), 64, 73
Kapilavastu (city), 29, 30
Karma, 61, 77
Karmadana, 156, 168, 169, 172
Karman, 121, 126, 135, 183
Kasi (country), 11
Kasmlra (country), 41, 93, 121-24,
146, 150, 180
Kasyapa (first patriarch). See
Mahakasyapa
Kasyapa (Buddha), 60
Kausika. See Sakra
Kosthaka (country), 88
Krakucchanda (Buddha), 79, 80
Krakustha (river), 103
Krmisa (Yaksa), 88, 89
Ksatriya, 68
Kukkuta, 55
Monastery, 14, 21, 54, 64, 82-85,
88, 181, 182
Mountain, 111, 113
Kulika, 5
Kumuda, 122,126
Kunala (Asoka’s son), 46, 47, 49,
' 63-67, 69-82
kunala (bird), 64
Kuhkuma, 124
Kusinagara (city), 93-95
Kutaru-navaka, 123
Kuvera (heavenly king). See Four
Heavenly Kings
Laksa, 12
Lakuca, 19, 79
Lay believer(s), 2, 60, 124, 126,152,
156, 164, 184
Liang dynasty, 2, 20
Liberation(s), 16, 23, 36, 53, 116, 131,
146,155, 156, 170
Licchavis, 119
Lightning, 77
Lion, 145, 175
king(s), 110, 143
Roar of, 27, 28, 42, 88, 154, 155
seat, 145
Lotus, 16, 28, 53, 63, 72, 82,120, 122,
132, 135, 138, 143
Luo-yang, 1
Madhyantika (third patriarch), 2, 93,
107, 121-24, 183
Magadha (county), 1, 33, 57, 98, 112,
120,122
Mahabrahman, 138, 139
Mahakasyapa (first partriarch), 2, 35,
36, 93-104, 107-15, 117, 118,
121,142, 151, 183
Mahamaudgalyayana (elder), 115
Mahamaya (Sakyamuni’s mother), 27
Mahamuni (great sage), 43
Mahaprajapati (Sakyamuni’s
step-mother), 29
Mahasattva (great being), 134
Mahayana, 2
Mahesvara, 138
Maid(s), 13, 15, 29, 31, 39, 40, 51, 52,
130-32
Maitreya (future Buddha), 111—14
Malaya Mountain, 137
Mallikd, 68
Mandarava flowers, 110
Mango. SeeA m ra
M ani, 110
Mara(s), 32,104,113, 129, 136-42,
144-46
Matrka, 178
Maudgalyayana (elder), 34, 35, 117,
142, 151
Merchant(s), 15, 32, 109, 114, 125,
130, 131, 153-55, 157, 174, 175
Minister(s), 9, 11-13, 21, 22, 36, 37,
39, 46, 47, 49-51, 56, 60, 63, 66,
67, 81-84, 87, 182
Minor rules, 103,104
Monkey, 92, 93
Moon, 3, 24, 32, 42, 43, 63, 71, 72,
76, 84, 100, 101, 136, 137, 142,
143
Mrgadava (park). See Deer Park
Naga(s), 22, 33, 59, 64, 126. See also
Dragon(s)
king, 19, 21, 31, 32, 35, 91, 110,
122-24, 126, 127, 180
palace, 19, 110
Nakulas (country), 153
Nanda (Naga king), 35
Nata (almsgiver), 91, 118, 127
Natabhatika Monastery, 21, 22, 91,
' 127,'135, 147, 149, 152, 156, 158,
159, 181,182
Nirgrantha (heretic), 59, 60
Nisldana, 100
Non-action, 23
Non-ego, 6,158
Novices, 48
Padmavati (Asoka’s wife), 63
Parajikai s), 102
Pdramitds. See Six Paramitas
Parthia, 1
Pataliputra (city), 1, 7-9, 11, 15,17,
23, 56, 88, 181
Patra, 110
Physiognomist, 8-10, 29, 66, 70
Pindavana (monastery), 124
Pindola Bharadvaja (elder), 42-45, 47
Pingalavatsajiva (heretical
physiognomist), 9
Pippali, 68
Pippalayana Grotto, 99, 112
Pitakais). See Tripitaka
Pratyekabuddha(s), 6, 42, 60, 77, 92,
93, 125, 151
Precept(s), 88, 115, 125, 126, 181
Eight, 41
Prince(s), 9-12,15, 46, 47, 49-52, 67,
69, 75, 76, 82, 83, 87, 119
Provisor, 159, 160
Pundarika, 122, 126
Pundravardhana (country), 44
Punyavardhana (country), 58, 59
Purna (elder), 96, 97
Pusyamitra (king), 1, 87-89
Qi dynasty, 2
Radhagupta (Asoka’s minister), 9, 12,
13, 45, 46, 82, 86, 87, 182
Raft, 94, 134
Rajagrha (city), 3, 43, 45, 98, 99, 109,
111, 113, 118,122
Raksasa(s), 113, 164, 182
Ramagrama (village), 19
Realms, three, 16, 17, 23, 53, 74, 100,
101, 168
Rebirth/Reincarnation, 6, 26, 29, 33,
35, 55, 74, 94,116,134, 147,148,
153, 157, 159, 161, 163,165,167,
168, 172, 173
Recluse(s), 6, 8, 16, 25, 29, 30, 33, 70,
92, 101, 114, 117,119-21, 141
Relic(s), 17-21, 25, 34, 41, 45, 94, 109
bones, 7, 8
hair and nail, 61
stupas, 38, 110
tooth, 88, 89, 110
Rupakaya, 141
Sagara (monk), 15
Sakra, 33, 35, 86, 93-95,110, 112,
137, 138
Sakrdagamin, 121, 145, 154, 174,
175, 177
Sakyamuni, 15, 49, 50, 80, 94, 114,
168,172
Sala (country), 139
Sala (tree), 94
Samddhi, 57,102, 109, 121, 136, 146,
150-52, 184
of cessation, 108
of compassion, 122, 123, 126, 127
fire, 121, 152, 156, 184
five kinds of, 146
of non-disputation, 43
as Powerful as a Dragon, 150
of Pure Harmony and the [Seven]
Phases of Enlightenment, 151
of suchness, 122
Samghatl, 114
Samkasya (country), 44
Sampadin (Kunala’s son), 82, 87
Sana, 109, 115^ 146
Sanakavasin (fourth patriarch), 2, 91,
107, 109, 114, 115, 118, 124-29,
135, 146, 149-52
Sdnavasa, 125, 126
Sand, offering of, 5, 7, 8, 21, 26, 45, 82
Sangha, 18, 42, 47, 53, 54, 60, 70, 81,
85-87, 96, 97, 99, 134, 135, 171
Sariputra (elder), 34,115,117, 142,
151
Sarlra, 41, 124, 184
Sarvamitra (monk), 46
Sects, five, 40, 46, 47, 49
Self-enlightened Buddha. See
Pratyekab uddha
Sirisa Palace, 95, 96
Six paramitas, 143
Skandhas, 153
five, 53
Skeleton, 133,170
Snow Mountains, 64, 79, 120
South Sea, 89
Sràvaka(s), 6, 99, 142
Sràvasti (country), 15, 44
Srota-àpanna, 72, 121, 134, 145, 154,
167-69, 171, 172, 174, 175, 177,
178, 183
Stonecutter, 169
Stupa(s), 7, 8,17-21, 25, 29, 32,
34-37, 49, 60, 63, 80, 81, 87, 88,
94, 110, 114, 122, 124, 152,157,
184
Buddha-, 18, 19, 54
Dharmaràja, 45
Drona, 19
relic, 38
Subhadra (elder), 121
Subhavyuha (king), 80
Subhùti (elder), 142
Sudarsana (monk), 180, 181
Suffering(s), 5, 6, 16, 35, 36, 52, 53,
60, 68, 71, 73, 74, 77, 79, 101,
110, 134, 159, 172
Sugata, 41
Sugupta, 56
Suklodana, King, 29, 30
Sumàgadhà, 44
Sumera, 111, 140, 143, 150
Sunga dynasty, 1
Sunihita (mountain), 89
Supernatural power(s), 17, 18, 35, 44,
95, 99, 110, 112, 121-24, 126,
135, 137-39, 147, 148, 150-52,
158, 164, 165, 184
four, 102,104
five, 120
six, 42, 54, 64
Sura (wealthy man), 142
Susina (Bindusara’s son), 8, 11-13
Sutra(s), 37, 100-2, 108, 116, 153, 178
Taksasilà (city), 10-12, 19, 66-70, 74,
79
Tala, 86
Tathàgata, 5, 7, 21, 22, 26-29, 31-34,
37, 40, 41, 43, 44, 53, 59, 80, 83,
91, 96-100, 103, 104, 111, 134,
138^4, 155
Thailand, 2
Thirty-three heavens. See
Trayastrimsa (heavens)
Thunder, 7, 77,’79,122, 123, 126
Tiger cub, 147, 148
Tisyaraksita (Asoka’s wife), 39, 65-68,
73,78,79
Transformation(s), 142, 152, 176, 184
of Buddha, 44
eighteen, 108, 121, 125
Trapusa (merchant), 32
Trayastrimsa (heavens), 44,110, 138
Tripitaka, 1, 95, 108, 115, 149, 150,
152
Abhidharma(s), 102, 108, 151, 178
Dhaima-pitaka, 25, 35, 93-95,
97-100, 102, 107-109, 111,
112, 114, 115, 118, 119,
121-24,126,137,141, 151,
183, 184
Vinaya, 54, 102, 108, 178
Turmeric, 124
Udana, 100
Udraka Ramaputra (Sakyamuni’s
teacher), 30
Upadhyaya, 98, 107, 121, 149-51,
159, 163, 167, 172, 176-80, 183
Upagupta (fifth patriarch), 2, 21-29,
31-38, 60, 79, 91, 93, 107, 118,
128-32, 134-53, 156, 158-84
Upajeta (heretic), 32
Upali (elder), 102
Upananda (Naga king), 35
Upasakai s), 107, 180
Updsikal s), 107
Urumanda Mountain, 21, 22, 91—93,
118,'126-28, 145, 147
Utpala, 63, 122, 126, 143
Utpalavamika (nun), 44
Vaidehi (queen), 99
Vaisali (country), 118-20,122
Vakula (elder), 36
Varanasi (country), 32, 79, 101, 125
Vasudatta (courtesan), 130-35
Videha (country), 56
Vimuktimarga, 2
Vinaya. See Tripitaka
Vipasyin (Buddha), 157
Virudhaka (heavenly king). See Four
Heavenly Kings
Virupaksa (heavenly king). See Four
Heavenly Kings
Vltasoka (Asoka’s younger brother), 9,
49, 51-60
193
Index
Voidness, 6
Vrji (country), 98,102
Vrjiputra (elder), 98
Ways of existence, five, 52
Wisdom(s), 7,16, 21, 24, 34, 36, 37,
39, 48, 56, 58, 74, 96, 101, 102,
108, 116, 117, 120, 140, 143,
149-51, 153, 170
Diamond of, 122
Eye of, 72, 73
Mother of, 102
Wu, Emperor, 1
Yaksa(s), 19, 33, 59, 64, 88, 89
Yasas (elder), 20-22, 42, 47, 48, 54,
64, 71
Yojana, 11, 23, 59, 64, 67
Zheng-guan Monastery, 2
----------------------------------------------------
A List of the Volumes of
the BDK English Tripitaka
(First Series)
Abbreviations
C h .: Chinese
S k t.: Sanskrit
Jp.\ Japanese
T.: Taishö Tripitaka
Vol. No. Title T. No.
1,2 Ch. Ch‘ang-a-han-ching 1
Skt. Dirghägama
3-8 Ch. Chung-a-han-ching ((l'l®J"a 15) 26
Skt. Madhyamagama
9-1 Ch. Ta-ch‘eng-pen-sheng-hsin-ti-kuan-ching 159
9-II Ch. Fo-so-hsing-tsan (ffiP/ffrlM) 192
Skt. Buddhacarita
10-1 Ch. Tsa-pao-ts‘ang-ching (ffiffÄIM) 203
10-11 Ch. Fa-chü-p‘i-yü-ching (i£/n]||l,l<85) 211
11-1 Ch. Hsiao-p‘in-pan-jo-po-lo-mi-ching 227
Skt. Astasähasrikä-prajnäpäramitä-sütra
11-11 Ch. Chin-kang-pan-jo-po-lo-mi-ching 235
Skt. Vajracchedikä-prajnäpäramitä-sütra
195
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No. Title T. No.
ll-III Ch. Jên-wang-pan-jo-po-lo-mi-ching 245
Skt. Kärunikäräjä-prajnäpäramitä-sütra (?)
1 1 -IV Ch. Pan-jo-po-lo-mi-to-hsing-ching (teïrÏ&.8 Ï ' ) 251
Skt. Prajnàpàramitâhrdaya-sütra
1 2 - 1 Ch. Ta-lo-chin-kang-pu-k‘ung-chên-shih-san-mo-yehching
243
Skt. Adhyardhasatikâ-prajnâpâramitâ-sütra
12 - 1 1 Ch. Wu-liang-shou-ching (ÄJc#fe) 360
Skt. Sukhâvativyüha
1 2 -III Ch. Kuan-wu-liang-shou-fo-ching ( I l S M ! P \%S ) 365
Skt. Amitàyurdhyâna-sütra
1 2 -IV Ch. A-mi-t‘o-ching (ffilK ll) 366
Skt. Sukhâvativyüha
12-V Ch. Ti-ts‘ang-p‘u-sa-pên-yüan-ching ( ü Ü lf fi 11) 412
Skt. Ksitigarbhapranidhâna-sütra (?)
1 2 -VI Ch. Yao-shih-liu-li-kuang-ju-lai-pên-yüan-kung-têching )
450
Skt. Bhaisajyaguruvaidüryaprabhâsapürvapranidhânavisesavistara
1 2 -VII Ch. Mi-lê-hsia-shêng-ch‘êng-fo-ching ("ffî ©J T 4,S& OP ft) 454
Skt. Maitreyavyâkarana (?)
12-VI II Ch. Wên-shu-shih-li-wên-ching (X $1W ? IJ Pu] ft) 468
Skt. Manjusripariprcchâ (?)
13-1 Ch. Miao-fa-lien-hua-ching (i'P'/£31 sï ft ) 262
Skt. Saddharmapundarika-sütra
13-11 Ch. Wu-liang-i-ching ( f i U t Ü f t ) 276
13-III Ch. Kuan-p‘u-hsien-p‘u-sa-hsing-fa-ching
n i
277
14-19 Ch. Ta-fang-kuang-fo-hua-yen-ching 278
Skt. Avatamsaka-sütra
196
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No. Title T. No.
2 0 -1 Ch. Shêng-man-shih-tzü-hou-i-ch‘eng-ta-fang-pienfang-kuang-ching
353
Skt. Srimälädevisiinhanäda-sütra
2 0 -11 Ch. Chin-kuang-ming-tsui-shêng-wang-ching 665
Skt. Suvarnaprabhäsa-sütra
21-24 Ch. Ta-pan-nieh-p‘an-ching 374
Skt. Mahäparinirväna-sütra
25-1 Ch. Fo-ch‘ui-pan-nieh-p‘an-liao-shuo-chiao-chiehching
389
25-11 Ch. Pan-chou-san-mei-ching ($£$■—(NclË) 418
Skt. Pratyutpannabuddhasammukhävasthitasamädhisütra
25-III Ch. Shou-lêng-yen-san-mei-ching felSi) 642
Skt. Sürangamasamädhi-sütra
25-IV Ch. Chieh-shên-mi-ching 676
Skt. Samdhinirmocana-sütra
25-V Ch. Yü-lan-p‘ên-ching (SlMSfe) 685
Skt. Ullambana-sütra (?)
25-VI Ch. Ssü-shih-êrh-chang-ching (E3+— 784
26-1 Ch. Wei-mo-chieh-so-shuo-ching (If Sin PJfM M ) 475
Skt. Vimalakirtinirdesa-sütra
26-11 Ch. Yüeh-shang-nü-ching (H 480
Skt. Candrottarädärikäpariprcchä
26-III Ch. Tso-ch‘an-san-mei-ching 614
26-IV Ch. Ta-mo-to-lo-ch‘an-ching (ÜlS^ftfflM) 618
Skt. Yogäcärabhümi-sütra (?)
27 Ch. Yüeh-têng-san-mei-ching 639
Skt. Samädhiräj acandrapradipa-sütra
28 Ch. Ju-lêng-ch‘ieh-ching (ÀtlftOlx) 671
Skt. Lankävatära-sütra
197
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No. Title T. No.
29-1 Ch. Ta-fang-kuang-yüan-chio-hsiu-to-lo-liao-i-ching 842
29-11 Ch. Su-hsi-ti-chieh-lo-ching
Skt. Susiddhikaramahätantrasädhanopäyika-patala
893
29-III Ch. Mo-têng-ch‘ieh-ching (flSIHftlS)
Skt. Mätahgi-sütra (?)
1300
30-1 Ch. Ta-p‘i-lu-chê-na-ch‘êng-fo-shên-pien-chia-ch‘ihching (*SJ*£Ï|5JS0Mi|«I)D«MS)
Skt. Mahävairocanäbhisambodhivikurvitädhisthänavaipulyasütrendraràja-nâma-dharmaparyâya
848
30-11 Ch. Chin-kang-ting-i-ch‘ieh-ju-lai-chên-shih-shê-tach‘eng-hsien-chêng-ta-chiao-wang-ching
Skt. Sarvatathägatatattvasamgrahamahäyänäbhisamayamahäkalparäja
865
31-35 Ch. Mo-ho-sêng-ch‘i-lü (SÏI"H'll'ft(ï:)
Skt. Mahâsâmghika-vinaya (?)
1425
36-12 C h. Ssü-fên-lü (W 'n -'m
Skt. Dharmaguptaka-vinaya (?)
1428
43,44 Ch. Shan-chien-lü-p‘i-p‘o-sha (lïM.fl^SL®?!!')
P âli Samantapäsädikä
1462
45-1 Ch. Fan-wang-ching (fulfill.)
Skt. Brahmajâla-sütra (?)
1484
45-11 Ch. Yu-p‘o-sai-chieh-ching (ISÏIÉhÔf)
Skt. Upâsakasila-sütra (?)
1488
46-1 Ch. Miao-fa-lien-hua-ching-yu-po-t‘i-shê
Skt. Saddharmapundankopadesa
1519
46-11 Ch. Fo-ti-ching-lun (ffiifelfgra)
Skt. Buddhabhümisütra-sâstra (?)
1530
46-III Ch. Shê-ta-ch‘eng-lun (M^C^Im)
Skt. Mahâyânasamgraha
1593
47 Ch. Shih-chu-p‘i-p‘o-sha-lun (+fÎS#i'J,'fw)
Skt. Dasabhümika-vibhâsâ (?)
1521
198
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No. Title T. No.
48,49 Ch. A-p‘i-ta-mo-chu-she-lun (ft ft ft ft ft ft 5ra) 1558
Skt. Abhidharmakosa-bhasya
50-59 Ch. Yu-ch‘ieh-shih-ti-lun (ItfilD CT idllra) 1579
Skt. Yogacarabhumi
60-1 Ch. Ch‘eng-wei-shih-lun (ftOftiSem) 1585
Skt. Vijnaptimatratasiddhi-sastra (?)
60-11 Ch. Wei-shih-san-shih-lun-sung (^ III—ft £|f) 1586
Skt. Trims ika
60-III Ch. Wei-shih-erh-shih-lun ftlm ) 1590
Skt. Vimsatika
61-1 Ch. Chung-lun (ftfim) 1564
Skt. Madhyamaka-sastra
61-11 Ch. Pien-chung-pien-lun (ftftfti») 1600
Skt. Madhyantavibhaga
61-III Ch. Ta-ch‘eng-ch‘eng-yeh-lun (ftft Aftpira) 1609
Skt. Karmasiddhiprakarana
61-IV Ch. Yin-ming-ju-cheng-li-lun (SftAIHfttira) 1630
Skt. Nyayapravesa
61-V Ch. Chin-kang-chen-lun Blit Ira) 1642
Skt. Vajrasuci
61-VI Ch. Chang-so-chih-lun (MPfUOtm) 1645
62 Ch. Ta-ch‘eng-chuang-yen-ching-lun 1604
Skt. Mahay anas utr alamkar a
63-1 Ch. Chiu-ching-i-ch‘eng-pao-hsing-lun
tttt)
1611
Skt. Ratnagotravibhagamahayanottaratantra-sastra
63-11 Ch. P‘u-t‘i-hsing-ching (S t l It S ) 1662
Skt. Bodhicaryavatara
63-III Ch. Chin-kang-ting-yu-ch‘ieh-chung-fa-a-nou-to-losan-miao-san-p‘u-t‘i-hsin-lun
1665
63-IV Ch. Ta-ch‘eng-ch‘i-hsin-lun 1666
Skt. Mahayanasraddhotpada-sastra (?)
199
BDK English Tripitaka
Vol. No.
63-V Ch.
P ali
64 Ch.
Skt.
65 Ch.
66-1 Ch.
6 6 -11 Ch.
6 6-III Ch.
6 6-IV Ch.
67, 68 Ch.
69 Ch.
70-1 Ch.
70-11 Ch.
70-III Ch.
70-IV Ch.
71, 72 Ch.
73-1 Ch.
73-11 Ch.
73-III Ch.
73-IV Ch.
74-1 Ch.
74-11 Ch.
Title
C h. Shih-mo-ho-yen-lun (ffI#S"If/:5ra)
Pan-jo-po-lo-mi-to-hsin-ching-yu-ts
MMMM)
Ch. San-lun-hsiian-i (—firaSJt)
Ch. Chao-lun (Sin)
Miao-fa-lien-hua-ching-hsuan-i
Ch. Ta-ch‘eng-hsuan-lun (A?Pi-£nra)
Hua-yen-i-ch‘eng-chiao-i-fen-ch‘i-
(¥K-*tsc m im m )
Ch. Yuan-jen-lun (IEAim)
Hsiu-hsi-chih-kuan-tso-ch‘an-fa-3
(AtiABrawiafe)
Huang-po-shan-tuan-chi-ch‘an-shih-ch
hsin-fa-yao (ftlflItiSrl'SijiiBiliffljl'i'ffiR)
Ch. Yung-chia-cheng-tao-ko (AI5la ill life)
Chen-chou-lin-chi-hui-chao-ch‘an-shihCh. Wu-men-kuan (ft FI HI)
T. No.
1670
1636
1668
1710
1753
1852
1858
1716
1853
1866
1886
1915
1931
1911
1934
2008
2012 A
2014
1985
2005
200
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No. Title T. No.
74-III Ch. Hsin-hsin-ming (IS'L'IS) 2 0 10
74-IV Ch. Ch‘ih-hsiu-pai-chang-ch‘ing-kuei 2025
75 Ch. Fo-kuo-yüan-wu-ch‘an-shih-pi-yen-lu 2003
76-1 Ch. I-pu-tsung-lun-lun (J^ aß ^fraisi) 2031
Skt. Samayabheàoparacanacakra
76-11 Ch. A-yü-wang-ching ( I ® J f T Ï J i ) 2043
Skt. Aiokaräja-sütra (?)
76-III Ch. Ma-ming-p‘u-sa-ch‘uan 2046
76-IV Ch. Lung-shu-p‘u-sa-ch‘uan (ft Ist If® ff) 2047
76-V Ch. P‘o-sou-p‘an-tou-fa-shih-ch‘uan
(#l£ïlïL fë6iP&)
2049
76-VI Ch. Pi-ch‘iu-ni-ch‘uan ( I t J x / Ë l # ) 2063
76-VII Ch. Kao-sêng-fa-hsien-ch‘uan (flj'faiiill'fflî) 2085
76-VIII Ch. T‘ang-ta-ho-shang-tung-chêng-ch‘uan 208947)
77 Ch. Ta-t‘ang-ta-tz‘ü-ên-ssü-san-ts‘ang-fa-shihch‘uan ^'/ÈÈiPIW)
2053
78 Ch. Kao-sêng-ch‘uan (iwjli'PÏ) 2059
79 Ch. Ta-t‘ang-hsi-yü-chi (^CÄffiiäcIE) 2087
80 Ch. Hung-ming-chi (^ lÆ ^ k ) 2 1 0 2
81-92 Ch. Fa-yüan-chu-lin (VÈI&BM5^) 2 1 2 2
93-1 Ch. Nan-hai-chi-kuei-nei-fa-ch‘uan
OtfëïFê§i*ii£fil)
2125
93-11 Ch. Fan-yü-tsa-ming ($Ennlt£i) 2135
94-1 Jp. Shö-man-gyö-gi-sho (ffiîl&IÈïKc) 2185
94-11 Jp. Yui-ma-kyö-gi-sho (IHSISÄK) 2186
95 Jp. Hok-ke-gi-sho 2187
201
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No.
96-1 Jp.
96-11 Jp.
96-III Jp.
97-1 Jp.
97-11 Jp.
97-III Jp.
97-lV Jp.
98-1 Jp.
98-11 Jp.
98-III Jp.
98-IV Jp.
98-V Jp.
98-VI Jp.
98-VII Jp.
98-VIII Jp.
98-IX Jp.
99-103 Jp.
104-1 Jp.
104-11 Jp.
104-III Jp.
104-IV Jp.
104-V Jp.
104-VI Ch.
Title
Han-ny a-shin-gyö-hi-ken (lx ' ù feffi It )
Dai-jö-hos-sö-ken-jin-shö ( ivSÜtöWfW V-)
Kan-jin-kaku-mu-shö (‘M 'L 'fl-ß fP )
Ris-shü-kô-yô
Ten-dai-hok-ke-shü-gi-shü
Ken-kai-fon ( IS /fiera )
San-ge-gaku-shö-shiki
Hi-zö-hö-yaku
Ben-ken-mitsu-ni-kyö-ron (Siffig—few)
Soku-shin-jö-butsu-gi (EP# tìtoli)
Shö-ji-jis-sö-gi
Un-ji-gi
Go-rin-ku-ji-myö-hi-mitsu-shaku
Mitsu-gon-in-hotsu-ro-san-ge-mon
m -m m m m m x)
Kö-zen-go-koku-ron (Ä-SlUSlm)
Fu-kan-za-zen-gi (iaïiÆtfifti)
Shö-bö-gen-zö GEftSIül)
Za-zen-yö-jin-ki
Sen-chaku-hon-gan-nen-butsu-shü
Ris-shö-an-koku-ron (jlIE^cS Iw)
Kai-moku-shö (IS H PP)
Kan-jin-hon-zon-shö
Fu-mu-ên-chung-ching (3C15SSS)
T. No.
2203
2309
2312
2348
2366
2376
2377
2426
2427
2428
2429
2430
2514
2527
2543
2580
2582
2586
2608
2688
2689
2692
2887
202
BDK English Tripitaka
Voi. No. Title T. No.
105-1 Jp. Ken-jö-do-shin-jitsu-kyö-gyö-shö-mon-rui 2646
105-11 Jp. Tan-ni-shö (ifcHÎ!!'') 2661
106-1 Jp. Ren-nyo-shö-nin-o-fumi 2668
106-11 Jp. O-jö-yö-shü 2682
107-1 Jp. Has-shü-kö-yö (ÄH
107-11 Jp. San-gö-shi-ki (Hütfê'Jf) Ä H
107-III Jp. Map-pö-tö-myö-ki Ä H
107-rv Jp. Jü-shichi-jö-ken-pö (“h-fcfliÄffi) Ä H