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The wife of Prince Sāli.
She was a candāla woman of exceedingly great beauty, and the prince married
her, thus renouncing his right to the throne (Mhv.Xxiii.2-4). The two had been
husband and wife, named Tissa and Nagā, in a previous existence and had lived in
Mundagangā in Ceylon. One day the husband received a pig from a hunter in
payment of some smith's work he had done. Having prepared the animal for food,
he expressed the wish that eight holy monks might come to accept alms from him.
His wife joining him in this wish, they decorated the house, prepared eight
seats, strewed the village path with sand and awaited the guests.
Dhammadinna Thera of Piyangudīpa, having
divined the man's wish, came to the village with seven colleagues. After they
had eaten, they gave thanks and went away. The man was born as Sāli the son of
Dutthagāmani, but his wife was born as a
candāla as punishment for an offence in another existence. She had been the
youngest of seven daughters of a carpenter and was one day scolded by her mother
for untidiness. In anger she used to her mother the same abusive terms as had
been hurled at her. This undutiful behaviour caused her to be born as the
daughter of a candāla. MT.606 f.
Her name was Devī, and her father was the chief candāla in Hallolagāma. Her
story is given at great length in Ras.ii.117f.

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