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Mahānāradakassapa Jātaka (No. 544)
Angati, king of
Mithilā in Videha,
is a good ruler. One full moon night he consults his ministers as to how they
shall amuse themselves. Alāta suggests new conquests; Sunāma suggests that they
shall seek pleasure in dance, song and music; but
Vijaya recommends that they shall visit some samana or brahmin. Angati falls
in with the views of Vijaya, and in great state goes to
Guna of the Kassapagotta, an ascetic who lives in the park near the city.
Guna preaches to him that there is no fruit, good or evil, in the moral life;
there is no other world than this, no strength, no courage; all beings are
predestined and follow their course like the ship her stern. Alāta approves of
the views of Guna; he remembers how, in his past life, he was a wicked
councillor called Pingala; from there he was born in the family of a general,
and now he is a minister. A slave, Bījaka, who is present, can remember his past
life and says he was once Bhavasetthi in Sāketa, virtuous and generous, but he
is now the son of a prostitute. Even now he gives away half his food to any in
need, but see how destitute he is!
Angati is convinced that Guna's doctrine is correct, and resolves to find
delight only in pleasure. He gives orders that he shall not be disturbed in his
palace; Candaka, his minister, is deputed to look after the kingdom. Fourteen
days pass in this manner. Then the king's only child, his beloved daughter
Rujā, comes to him arrayed in splendour, attended
by her maidens, and asks for one thousand to be given the next day to
mendicants. Angati protests; he will deny his daughter no pleasure or luxury,
but has learnt too much to approve of her squandering money on charity or
wasting her energy in keeping the fasts.
Rujā is at first amazed, then tells her father that his councillors are
fools, they have not taken reckoning of the whole of their past, but remember
only one birth or two; they cannot therefore judge. She herself remembers
several births; in one she was a smith in Rājagaha and committed adultery, but
that sin remained hidden, like fire covered with ashes, and she was born as a
rich merchant's only son in Kosambī. There she
engaged in good works, but, because of previous deeds, she was born after death
in the Roruva-niraya and then as a castrated goat
in Bhennākata. In her next birth she was a monkey, and then an ox among the
Dasannas; then a hermaphrodite among the Vajjians, and later a nymph in
Tāvatimsa. Once more her good deeds have come
round, and hereafter she will be born only among gods and men. Seven births
hence she will be a male god in Tāvatimsa, and even now the god Java is
gathering a garland for her.
All night she preaches in this way to her father, but he remains unconvinced.
The Bodhisatta is a Brahmā, named Nārada Kassapa, and, surveying the world, sees
Rujā and Angati engaged in conversation. He therefore appears in the guise of an
ascetic, and Angati goes out to greet and consult him. The ascetic praises
goodness, charity, and generosity, and speaks of other worlds. Angati laughs,
and asks for a loan which, he says, he will repay twice over in the next world,
as the ascetic seems so convinced that there is one. Nārada tells him of the
horrors of the hell in which Angati will be reborn unless he mends his ways, and
mentions to him the names of former kings who attained to happiness through good
lives. The king at last sees his error and determines to choose new friends.
Nārada Kassapa reveals his identity and leaves in all majesty.
The story was related in reference to the conversion of
Uruvela Kassapa. He came, after his
conversion, with the Buddha to Latthivana, and
the people wondered if he had really become a follower of the Buddha. He
dispelled their doubts by describing the folly of the sacrifices which he had
earlier practised, and, laying his head on the Buddha's feet did obeisance. Then
he rose seven times into the air, and, after having worshipped the Buddha, sat
on one side. The people marvelled at the Buddha's powers of conversion, which,
the Buddha said, were not surprising since he possessed them already as a
Bodhisatta.
Angati is identified with Uruvela Kassapa, Alāta with Devadatta, Sunāma with
Bhaddiya, Vijaya with Sāriputta, Bījaka with Moggallāna, Guna with the Licchavi
Sunakkhatta, and Rujā with Ananda. J. vi.219 55; see also J. i.83.

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