Dīgha Nikāya


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Sacred Books of the Buddhists
Volume IV

Dīgha Nikāya

Dialogues of the Buddha
Part III

Sutta 26

Cakka-Vatti Sīhanāda Suttantaɱ

The Lion-roar on the Turning of the Wheel

War, Wickedness, and Wealth

Translated from the Pali by T.W. Rhys Davids and
C.A.F. Rhys Davids

Public Domain

Originally published under the patronage of
His Majesty King Chulālankarana,
King of Siam
by The Pali Text Society, Oxford

 


[53]

Introduction
to the
Cakkavatti-Sīhanāda Suttanta

ASOKA states in his Edicts that it was the horrors of actual warfare, as brought to his notice during his conquest of Kalīnga, that led him to the propagation, in those Edicts, of the Dhamma - the Norm - as the only true conquest. So the Buddha is represented in this Suttanta as setting out his own idea of conquest (not without ironical reference to the current ideas), and then as inculcating the observance of the Dhamma - the Norm - as the most important force for the material and moral progress of mankind.

Vraisemblance. OED: An appearance of truth. Versimilitude

Poioumenon. All the on-line definitions steal from each other. The meaning is apparently a type of fiction that deals with the process of creation.

Sartor Resartus (meaning 'The tailor re-tailored') is an 1836 novel by Thomas Carlyle, first published as a serial in 1833-34 in Fraser's Magazine. The novel purports to be a commentary on the thought and early life of a German philosopher called Diogenes Teufelsdröckh (which translates as 'god-born devil-dung'), author of a tome entitled "Clothes: their Origin and Influence", but was actually a poioumenon. Teufelsdröckh's Transcendentalist musings are mulled over by a skeptical English Reviewer (referred to as Editor) who also provides fragmentary biographical material on the philosopher. The work is, in part, a parody of Hegel, and of German Idealism more generally. However, Teufelsdröckh is also a literary device with which Carlyle can express difficult truths.
— Wikipedia

p.p. explains it all — p.p.

The whole is a fairy tale. The personages who play their part in it never existed. The events described in it never occurred. And more than that: a modern writer, telling a story to emphasize a moral, would always, like the creator of the immortal Dr. Teufelsdröckh, endeavour to give probability, vraisemblance, to the characters and events of his tale. Here the very opposite would seem to be the case. Recourse is had rather to the shock of improbability. This is in accord with the procedure in other cases (for instance, in the story of Sharp-tooth the Priest; or in that of the Riddles of the God[1]). The point of the moral - and in this fairy tale the moral is the thing - is the Reign of Law. Never before in the history of the world had this principle been proclaimed in so thorough-going and uncompromising a way. But of course it is not set out in such arguments as we find in modern treatises on ethics or philosophy. The authors are not writing a monograph on history or ethics. They are preaching a gospel, and their method is to state their view, and leave the hearer to accept it or not, just as he pleases.

The view was, so to speak, in the air at that time. The whole history of religion, in India as elsewhere, had been the history of a struggle between the opposing ideas, or groups of ideas, that may be summed up by the words Animism and Normalism.

[54] Animism has now become a well-known term. It is based on the very ancient hypothesis of a soul — a subtle, material homunculus, or manikin, supposed to dwell in the heart of a man. This afforded what seemed a simple and self-evident explanation of many mysterious things. When in his dream a man saw another, whom, when the dreamer woke, he knew to have been dead, he at once concluded, on the evidence of the dream, that the person he saw in his dream was still alive. It is true he had seen the body dead. But it was self-evident that a something, he knew not what, but very like the body, was still alive. He did not reason much about it, or stay to weigh the difficulties involved. But he was much too frightened of it to forget it. Once formed, the hypothesis was widely used. When a man awoke in the morning, after hunting all night in his dreams, and learnt from his companions that his body had been there all the time, it was, of course, his soul that had been away. In a similar way, death and trance and disease could be ascribed to the absence of the soul. Souls were believed to wander from body to body. Animals had souls, even things had souls, if they were uncanny, or when they seemed to have life and motion and sound. The awe-inspiring phenomena of nature were instinctively regarded as the result of spirit action; and rivers, plants, and stars, the earth, the air, and heaven, became full of souls of gods, each of them in fashion as a man, and with the passions of a man.

But wide-reaching as this hypothesis was, it could not cover everything. From the earliest times of which we have any record we find, in India as elsewhere, quite a number of religious beliefs and ceremonies which were not explained, and could not be explained by the hypothesis of a soul. In other words, they are not animistic. The first impression we get is that of the bewildering variety of such beliefs. But they can be arranged, with more or less exactitude, into overlapping groups — and behind all the groups can be discerned a single underlying principle. That principle is the belief in a certain rule, order, law. We have no word for such a belief in English; and this, since the theory is as important, in the ancient Indian religions, as Animism, is a pity. I have suggested, in my lectures on Comparative Religion in Manchester, to call it Normalism.

In the term 'Normalism' hear his 'Norm' = 'Dhamma'

p.p. explains it all — p.p.

Of course the men who held the beliefs, and practised the ceremonies so named, had no clear conception of the theory of Normalism, just as they had no clear conception of the theory of Animism. But they unmistakably held the view that things happened, effects were brought about, without [55] the agency of a soul or god, and quite as a matter of course; and they regarded that as the rule in such and such a case. Now we do not ourselves believe in the rule, or in any one of the rules, thus laid down (any more than we believe in the hypothesis of a homunculus within the heart). But the word Animism has been found most useful in clearing up our appreciation of ancient views. Its usefulness is limited, it is true. It covers rather less than half of the main beliefs recorded in the most ancient literatures of the world. The other half would be covered by the corresponding hypothesis of Normalism.

This is not the place to raise the question of the importance of Normalism in the general history of religions. Perhaps one of the reasons why, in Europe, so much more attention has been paid to Animism, maybe the general trend of belief in Europe being itself predominantly Animistic. But it is at least certain that in the far East, and more especially in China and India, Normalism is the more important of the two.

Lao Tsu

Tao or Dao is a Chinese concept signifying 'way', 'path', 'route', or sometimes more loosely, 'doctrine' or 'principle', or as a verb, speak. Within the context of traditional Chinese philosophy and religion, Tao is a metaphysical concept originating with Laozi that gave rise to a religion and philosophy referred to in English with the single term Taoism.
— article and image courtesy of Wikipedia

In China it is the basis of the theory of the Tao (the Way), which finds its earliest expression in the famous tractate of Lao Tsu, but was undoubtedly earlier than that, and is taken for granted also by Confucius.

Ying Yang

The famous Yin Yang Symbol representing the relationship of opposites that oppose each other and contain attributes of each other only to become each other. Round and round.

p.p. explains it all — p.p.

The Tao is quite Normalistic; and though much debased in later times in the official circles of Taoism, the early form of it has never ceased to influence the various intellectual centres of Chinese belief. The theory of Yang and Yin, also so widely, indeed universally, held in China, and also going back to very early times, is equally Normalistic. No one of these three conceptions was ever personified. All three rested on the idea of law, or rule, independent of any soul.

In India, our earliest records, the thousand and more Vedic hymns, seem at first sight to be altogether Animistic. They consist almost exclusively in appeals to various gods. The European books on Indian religions are concerned in treating of the Vedic period, with descriptions of these gods, based on the epithets applied to them, or the acts attributed to them, and so on. But these poems make no pretension to being a complete statement of the beliefs held by the tribes whose priests made or used the poems. Other poems, not included in our present collection, were doubtless extant in the community at the time when the collection was made. Other beliefs, not mentioned in the poems, were widely influential among the people. What we have is not complete even as a summary of the theosophy or the ritual [56] or the mythology of the priests; and it refers only incidentally to other beliefs, unconnected with gods, of great importance as a factor in religion and daily life.

This conclusion might be justified as rendered necessary by a critical consideration of the simple, known facts as to the composition of the anthology we call the Rig Veda. It is confirmed by the discovery in later Vedic books, especially in the manuals of domestic rites, of customs and beliefs, that must evidently go back to the Rig Veda period (though not referred to in that collection); and even of one or two such cases that certainly go back to an earlier period still. We have space here for only one or two sample instances, and even they can only be treated in the merest outline.

Take the case of Rita. The meaning of the word would seem to have passed through some such evolution as motion, rhythmic motion, order, cosmic order, moral order, the right. In those slowly moving ages a long period must be postulated for the growth and consolidation of such ideas. The word is found, incidentally mentioned, at the end of its career, in the Avesta and the Veda. It must have been in full use before the Persian Aryans had separated from the Indian Aryans. The idea may therefore with reasonable probability be traced back to the third millennium before Christ. The use of the word died out in India before the time of the rise of Buddhism. Of the pre-Buddhistic Upanishads it occurs only in one — the Taittirīya. In the peroration to that work Rita is placed above, before the gods. The word occurs, it is true, in three or four isolated passages of post-Buddhistic works, but these are archaisms. It has not been traced in either the Buddhist or the Jain canonical literature.

The process of the gradual decline in the use of an abstract word is precisely analogous to the process of the gradual decay and death of a god.[2] The word covers not one idea only, but a number of connotations. The implications involved in it are constantly, though imperceptibly, changing. Sooner or later one or other phase of it overmasters the others, and some new word or words, emphasizing some one or other of the various connotations of the older word, come gradually into use as more adequate or more clear. When that process is complete, the older word is dead. But it lives again in the newer word, or words, that have taken its place, and would never have been born or thought of unless the older word had previously lived. It was so with Rita — a broader and deeper conception than the Greek Moira; and [57] more akin to the Chinese Tao. Like these, Rita was never personified, and it lives again in the clearer and more definite (though still very imperfect) phrases of the Suttanta before us now.

The case of Rita is by no means unique. I have elsewhere discussed at some length another case, that of Tapas or self- mortification, austerity.[3] It was held in India from Vedic times onwards that tapas (originally burning glow, but afterwards used of fasting and other forms of self-mortification) worked out its effects by itself, without the intervention of any deity. This is only the more remarkable since it is almost certain that in India, as elsewhere, the ecstatic state of mind which rendered such austerity possible was originally often regarded as due to the inspiration of a spirit. But it is, so far as I know, never mentioned that the supranormal effects of the austerity were due to the spirit from whom the inspiration came. The effects were due to the austerity itself. Very often indeed there was no question of any deity's help in the determination to carry out the self-torture — just as in the case of the pujāris at the ghats in modern India.

Even the very sacrifice itself — made to gods, supposed to give sustenance and strength to gods, accompanied by hymns and invocations addressed to gods — was not entirely free from such Normalistic ideas. The hymns themselves already contain phrases which suggest that their authors began to see a certain mystic power over the gods in a properly conducted sacrifice. And we know that afterwards, in the Brāhmanas, this conception was carried to great lengths. So also we have evidence of a mystic power, independent of the gods, in the words, the verses, that accompany the sacrifice. And it is no contradiction of this that we find thus mystic power itself deified and becoming, indeed, in the course of centuries of speculation, the highest of the gods. And it is significative, in this connection, that the string of Behaspati's bow is precisely Rita.

It would be tedious (and it would also, after the above instances, be unnecessary, I trust) to quote the very numerous other instances in Vedic works of a slighter character and less importance, showing the existence of a theory of life the very opposite of Animism. They are naturally only quite incidental in the Rig Veda itself, and more and more frequent as the books get later, being most numerous in the Sūtra [58] period. Many of these can be classed under one or other of the various meanings given by anthropologists to the ambiguous and confusing word Magic[4] — the magic of names, or numbers, or propinquity, or likeness, or association, or sympathy, and so on. Many will also be found in the long list of practices from which it is said in the Sīlas (one of the very earliest of our Buddhist documents, earlier than the Piṭakas) that the Samana Gotama refrains.[5]

The above suffices to show something of the position of Normalism in pre-Buddhistic India. Our present Suttanta shows the stage it had reached in the period of the early Buddhists. It is a stage of great interest — differing, as it does, from the line of development followed by Normalism in other countries.

T.W. Rhys Davids.

 


[58] [59]

XXVI. Cakkavatti-Sīhanāda Suttanta[6]
(The Lion-roar on the Turning of the Wheel)

War, Wickedness, and Wealth

[1][than] THUS HAVE I HEARD.

The Exalted One was once staying in the land of the Magadhese
at Mātuhlā.

Now there the Exalted One addressed the brethren,[7] saying:

"Brethren!"

And they made answer:

"Lord!"

The Exalted One spake thus:

"Live ye as islands[8] unto yourselves, brethren,
as refuges unto yourselves,
taking no other as your refuge;
live with the doctrine (the Norm),
as your island,
with the Norm as your refuge,
taking no other as your refuge.

But how, brethren, does a brother live
as an island unto himself,
as a refuge unto himself,
taking no other as his refuge?

How does he live
with the Norm as his island,
with the Norm as his refuge,
taking no other refuge?

Herein,[9] brethren,
a brother as to the body,
continues so to look upon the body
that he remains ardent,
self-possessed,
and mindful,
that he may overcome both the hankering
and the dejection
common in the world;

as to the feelings,
continues so to look upon these
that he remains ardent,
self-possessed,
and mindful,
that he may overcome both the hankering
and the dejection
common in the world;

as to thought,
continues so to look upon these
that he remains ardent,
self-possessed,
and mindful,
that he may overcome both the hankering
and the dejection
common in the world;

as to ideas,[10]
continues so to look upon these
that he remains ardent,
self-possessed,
and mindful,
that he may overcome both the hankering
and the dejection
common in the world.

Thus, brethren, does a brother live
as an island unto himself,
as a refuge unto himself,
taking no other as his refuge
thus does he live with the Norm as his island,
with the Norm as his refuge,
taking no other refuge.

[60] Keep to your own pastures,[11] brethren,
walk in the haunts where your fathers roamed.[12]

If ye thus walk in them
the Evil One will find no landing-place,
no basis of attack.

It is precisely by the cultivation of good qualities
that this merit grows.

 

§

 

[59] 2. Long, long ago, brethren,
there was a sovran overlord named Strongtyre,
a righteous king ruling in righteousness,[13]
lord of the four quarters of the earth,
conqueror,
the protector of his people,
possessor of the seven precious things.

His were these seven precious things,
to wit,
the Wheel,
the Elephant,
the Horse,
the Gem,
the Woman,
the House-father, the Counsellor.

More than a thousand sons also were his,
heroes,
vigorous of frame,
crushers of the hosts of the enemy.[14]

He lived in supremacy
over this earth to its ocean bounds,
having conquered it,
not by the scourge,
not by the sword,
but by righteousness.

3. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
King Strongtyre commanded a certain man,
saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,' replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to King Strongtyre and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

[61] Then King Strongtyre, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son
be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill [60] of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge
over this earth bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.'

So, brethren, King Strongtyre,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.[15]

4. Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him,
saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then that king, brethren,
the anointed warrior,
was grieved thereat
and afflicted with sorrow.

And he went to the royal hermit
and told him,
saying:

'Know, sire, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.'

And the anointed king so saying,
the royal hermit made reply:

'Grieve thou not, dear son,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared,
nor be afflicted.

For no paternal heritage of thine,
dear son,
is the Celestial Wheel.

But verily, dear son, turn thou
in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners.[16]

[Act up to the noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovrans of the world.][17]

Then it may well be
that if thou carry [62] out the Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch,
and on the feast of the full moon
thou wilt go with bathed head
to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace,
lo! the Celestial Wheel will manifest itself
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
navel,
and all its parts complete.'

[61]5. 'But what, sire,
is this Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch?'

'This, dear son:
that thou,
leaning on the Norm
[the Law of truth and righteousness][18]
honouring, respecting and revering it,
doing homage to it,
hallowing it,
being thyself a Norm-banner,
a Norm-signal,
having the Norm as thy master,
shouldst provide the right watch, ward, and protection
for thine own folk,
for the army,
for the nobles,
for vassals,
for brahmins,
and householders,
for town and country dwellers,
for the religious world,
and for beasts and birds.

Throughout thy kingdom
let no wrongdoing prevail.

And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor,
to him let wealth be given.

And when, dear son,
in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising
from the intoxication of the senses,
and devoted to forbearance and sympathy,
each mastering self,
each calming self,
each perfecting self,
shall come to thee from time to time,
and question thee
concerning what is good and what is bad,
what is criminal and what is not,
what is to be done and what left undone,
what line of action will
in the long run
work for weal or for woe,
thou shouldst hear what they have to say,
and thou shouldst deter them from evil,
and bid them take up what is [63] good.

This, dear son,
is the Ariyan duty
of a sovran of the world.'

'Even so, sire,'
answered the anointed king,
and obeying,
carried out the Ariyan duty of a sovran lord.

To him, thus behaving,
when[19] on the feast of the full moon
he had gone in due observance
with bathed head
to the chief upper terrace,
the Celestial Wheel revealed itself,
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
its navel,
and all its parts complete.

And seeing this
it occurred to the king:

'It has been told me
that a king to whom
on such an occasion
the Celestial Wheel reveals itself completely,
[62] becomes a Wheel-turning monarch.

May I even I also
become a sovran of the world.'

6. Then, brethren,
the king arose from his seat,
and uncovering his robe from one shoulder,
took in his left hand a pitcher,
and with his right hand
sprinkled up over the Celestial Wheel,
saying:

'Roll onward, O lord Wheel!

Go forth and overcome, O lord Wheel!'

Then, brethren,
the Celestial Wheel rolled onwards
towards the region of the East,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the East
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'[20]

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink [64] no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions
as you have been wont to do.[21]

Then, brethren, all they
that were enemy kings
in the region of the East
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

7. Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Eastern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the South,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the South
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the South
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Southern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards
to the region of the West,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the West
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord, spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the West
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Western ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region [63]of the North,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the North
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the North
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth
conquering over the whole earth
to its ocean boundary,
it returned to the royal city,
and stood,
so that one might think it fixed,
in front of the judgment hall
at the entrance to the inner apartments of the king,
the Wheel-turner,
lighting up with its glory
the facade of the inner apartments of the king,
the sovran of the world.

 

§

 

[The Third in the Line]

8.1. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
King Strongtyre commanded a certain man,
saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,' replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to King Strongtyre and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

Then the King, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son
be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge
over this earth bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.'

So, brethren, the King,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.

Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him,
saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then that king, brethren,
the anointed warrior,
was grieved thereat
and afflicted with sorrow.

And he went to the royal hermit
and told him,
saying:

'Know, sire, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.'

And the anointed king so saying,
the royal hermit made reply:

'Grieve thou not, dear son,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared,
nor be afflicted.

For no paternal heritage of thine,
dear son,
is the Celestial Wheel.

But verily, dear son, turn thou
in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners.

[Act up to the noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovrans of the world.]

Then it may well be
that if thou carry out the Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch,
and on the feast of the full moon
thou wilt go with bathed head
to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace,
lo! the Celestial Wheel will manifest itself
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
navel,
and all its parts complete.'

'But what, sire,
is this Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch?'

'This, dear son:
that thou,
leaning on the Norm
[the Law of truth and righteousness]
honouring, respecting and revering it,
doing homage to it,
hallowing it,
being thyself a Norm-banner,
a Norm-signal,
having the Norm as thy master,
shouldst provide the right watch, ward, and protection
for thine own folk,
for the army,
for the nobles,
for vassals,
for brahmins,
and householders,
for town and country dwellers,
for the religious world,
and for beasts and birds.

Throughout thy kingdom
let no wrongdoing prevail.

And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor,
to him let wealth be given.

And when, dear son,
in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising
from the intoxication of the senses,
and devoted to forbearance and sympathy,
each mastering self,
each calming self,
each perfecting self,
shall come to thee from time to time,
and question thee
concerning what is good and what is bad,
what is criminal and what is not,
what is to be done and what left undone,
what line of action will
in the long run
work for weal or for woe,
thou shouldst hear what they have to say,
and thou shouldst deter them from evil,
and bid them take up what is good.

This, dear son,
is the Ariyan duty
of a sovran of the world.'

'Even so, sire,'
answered the anointed king,
and obeying,
carried out the Ariyan duty of a sovran lord.

To him, thus behaving,
when on the feast of the full moon
he had gone in due observance
with bathed head
to the chief upper terrace,
the Celestial Wheel revealed itself,
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
its navel,
and all its parts complete.

And seeing this
it occurred to the king:

'It has been told me
that a king to whom
on such an occasion
the Celestial Wheel reveals itself completely,
becomes a Wheel-turning monarch.

May I even I also
become a sovran of the world.'

Then, brethren,
the king arose from his seat,
and uncovering his robe from one shoulder,
took in his left hand a pitcher,
and with his right hand
sprinkled up over the Celestial Wheel,
saying:

'Roll onward, O lord Wheel!

Go forth and overcome, O lord Wheel!'

Then, brethren,
the Celestial Wheel rolled onwards
towards the region of the East,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the East
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions
as you have been wont to do.

Then, brethren, all they
that were enemy kings
in the region of the East
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Eastern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the South,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the South
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the South
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Southern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards
to the region of the West,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the West
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord, spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the West
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Western ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the North,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the North
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the North
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth
conquering over the whole earth
to its ocean boundary,
it returned to the royal city,
and stood,
so that one might think it fixed,
in front of the judgment hall
at the entrance to the inner apartments of the king,
the Wheel-turner,
lighting up with its glory
the facade of the inner apartments of the king,
the sovran of the world.

 

§

 

[The Fourth in the Line]

8.2. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
King Strongtyre commanded a certain man,
saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,' replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to King Strongtyre and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

Then the King, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son
be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge
over this earth bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.'

So, brethren, the King,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.

Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him,
saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then that king, brethren,
the anointed warrior,
was grieved thereat
and afflicted with sorrow.

And he went to the royal hermit
and told him,
saying:

'Know, sire, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.'

And the anointed king so saying,
the royal hermit made reply:

'Grieve thou not, dear son,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared,
nor be afflicted.

For no paternal heritage of thine,
dear son,
is the Celestial Wheel.

But verily, dear son, turn thou
in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners.

[Act up to the noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovrans of the world.]

Then it may well be
that if thou carry out the Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch,
and on the feast of the full moon
thou wilt go with bathed head
to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace,
lo! the Celestial Wheel will manifest itself
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
navel,
and all its parts complete.'

'But what, sire,
is this Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch?'

'This, dear son:
that thou,
leaning on the Norm
[the Law of truth and righteousness]
honouring, respecting and revering it,
doing homage to it,
hallowing it,
being thyself a Norm-banner,
a Norm-signal,
having the Norm as thy master,
shouldst provide the right watch, ward, and protection
for thine own folk,
for the army,
for the nobles,
for vassals,
for brahmins,
and householders,
for town and country dwellers,
for the religious world,
and for beasts and birds.

Throughout thy kingdom
let no wrongdoing prevail.

And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor,
to him let wealth be given.

And when, dear son,
in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising
from the intoxication of the senses,
and devoted to forbearance and sympathy,
each mastering self,
each calming self,
each perfecting self,
shall come to thee from time to time,
and question thee
concerning what is good and what is bad,
what is criminal and what is not,
what is to be done and what left undone,
what line of action will
in the long run
work for weal or for woe,
thou shouldst hear what they have to say,
and thou shouldst deter them from evil,
and bid them take up what is good.

This, dear son,
is the Ariyan duty
of a sovran of the world.'

'Even so, sire,'
answered the anointed king,
and obeying,
carried out the Ariyan duty of a sovran lord.

To him, thus behaving,
when on the feast of the full moon
he had gone in due observance
with bathed head
to the chief upper terrace,
the Celestial Wheel revealed itself,
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
its navel,
and all its parts complete.

And seeing this
it occurred to the king:

'It has been told me
that a king to whom
on such an occasion
the Celestial Wheel reveals itself completely,
becomes a Wheel-turning monarch.

May I even I also
become a sovran of the world.'

Then, brethren,
the king arose from his seat,
and uncovering his robe from one shoulder,
took in his left hand a pitcher,
and with his right hand
sprinkled up over the Celestial Wheel,
saying:

'Roll onward, O lord Wheel!

Go forth and overcome, O lord Wheel!'

Then, brethren,
the Celestial Wheel rolled onwards
towards the region of the East,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the East
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions
as you have been wont to do.

Then, brethren, all they
that were enemy kings
in the region of the East
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Eastern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the South,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the South
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the South
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Southern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards
to the region of the West,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the West
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord, spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the West
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Western ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the North,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the North
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the North
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth
conquering over the whole earth
to its ocean boundary,
it returned to the royal city,
and stood,
so that one might think it fixed,
in front of the judgment hall
at the entrance to the inner apartments of the king,
the Wheel-turner,
lighting up with its glory
the facade of the inner apartments of the king,
the sovran of the world.

 

§

 

[The Fifth in the Line]

8.3. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
King Strongtyre commanded a certain man,
saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,' replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to King Strongtyre and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

Then the King, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son
be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge
over this earth bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.'

So, brethren, the King,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.

Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him,
saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then that king, brethren,
the anointed warrior,
was grieved thereat
and afflicted with sorrow.

And he went to the royal hermit
and told him,
saying:

'Know, sire, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.'

And the anointed king so saying,
the royal hermit made reply:

'Grieve thou not, dear son,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared,
nor be afflicted.

For no paternal heritage of thine,
dear son,
is the Celestial Wheel.

But verily, dear son, turn thou
in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners.

[Act up to the noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovrans of the world.]

Then it may well be
that if thou carry out the Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch,
and on the feast of the full moon
thou wilt go with bathed head
to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace,
lo! the Celestial Wheel will manifest itself
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
navel,
and all its parts complete.'

'But what, sire,
is this Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch?'

'This, dear son:
that thou,
leaning on the Norm
[the Law of truth and righteousness]
honouring, respecting and revering it,
doing homage to it,
hallowing it,
being thyself a Norm-banner,
a Norm-signal,
having the Norm as thy master,
shouldst provide the right watch, ward, and protection
for thine own folk,
for the army,
for the nobles,
for vassals,
for brahmins,
and householders,
for town and country dwellers,
for the religious world,
and for beasts and birds.

Throughout thy kingdom
let no wrongdoing prevail.

And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor,
to him let wealth be given.

And when, dear son,
in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising
from the intoxication of the senses,
and devoted to forbearance and sympathy,
each mastering self,
each calming self,
each perfecting self,
shall come to thee from time to time,
and question thee
concerning what is good and what is bad,
what is criminal and what is not,
what is to be done and what left undone,
what line of action will
in the long run
work for weal or for woe,
thou shouldst hear what they have to say,
and thou shouldst deter them from evil,
and bid them take up what is good.

This, dear son,
is the Ariyan duty
of a sovran of the world.'

'Even so, sire,'
answered the anointed king,
and obeying,
carried out the Ariyan duty of a sovran lord.

To him, thus behaving,
when on the feast of the full moon
he had gone in due observance
with bathed head
to the chief upper terrace,
the Celestial Wheel revealed itself,
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
its navel,
and all its parts complete.

And seeing this
it occurred to the king:

'It has been told me
that a king to whom
on such an occasion
the Celestial Wheel reveals itself completely,
becomes a Wheel-turning monarch.

May I even I also
become a sovran of the world.'

Then, brethren,
the king arose from his seat,
and uncovering his robe from one shoulder,
took in his left hand a pitcher,
and with his right hand
sprinkled up over the Celestial Wheel,
saying:

'Roll onward, O lord Wheel!

Go forth and overcome, O lord Wheel!'

Then, brethren,
the Celestial Wheel rolled onwards
towards the region of the East,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the East
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions
as you have been wont to do.

Then, brethren, all they
that were enemy kings
in the region of the East
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Eastern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the South,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the South
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the South
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Southern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards
to the region of the West,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the West
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord, spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the West
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Western ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the North,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the North
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the North
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth
conquering over the whole earth
to its ocean boundary,
it returned to the royal city,
and stood,
so that one might think it fixed,
in front of the judgment hall
at the entrance to the inner apartments of the king,
the Wheel-turner,
lighting up with its glory
the facade of the inner apartments of the king,
the sovran of the world.

 

§

 

[The Sixth in the Line]

8.4. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
King Strongtyre commanded a certain man,
saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,' replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to King Strongtyre and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

Then the King, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son
be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge
over this earth bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.'

So, brethren, the King,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.

Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him,
saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then that king, brethren,
the anointed warrior,
was grieved thereat
and afflicted with sorrow.

And he went to the royal hermit
and told him,
saying:

'Know, sire, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.'

And the anointed king so saying,
the royal hermit made reply:

'Grieve thou not, dear son,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared,
nor be afflicted.

For no paternal heritage of thine,
dear son,
is the Celestial Wheel.

But verily, dear son, turn thou
in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners.

[Act up to the noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovrans of the world.]

Then it may well be
that if thou carry out the Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch,
and on the feast of the full moon
thou wilt go with bathed head
to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace,
lo! the Celestial Wheel will manifest itself
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
navel,
and all its parts complete.'

'But what, sire,
is this Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch?'

'This, dear son:
that thou,
leaning on the Norm
[the Law of truth and righteousness]
honouring, respecting and revering it,
doing homage to it,
hallowing it,
being thyself a Norm-banner,
a Norm-signal,
having the Norm as thy master,
shouldst provide the right watch, ward, and protection
for thine own folk,
for the army,
for the nobles,
for vassals,
for brahmins,
and householders,
for town and country dwellers,
for the religious world,
and for beasts and birds.

Throughout thy kingdom
let no wrongdoing prevail.

And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor,
to him let wealth be given.

And when, dear son,
in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising
from the intoxication of the senses,
and devoted to forbearance and sympathy,
each mastering self,
each calming self,
each perfecting self,
shall come to thee from time to time,
and question thee
concerning what is good and what is bad,
what is criminal and what is not,
what is to be done and what left undone,
what line of action will
in the long run
work for weal or for woe,
thou shouldst hear what they have to say,
and thou shouldst deter them from evil,
and bid them take up what is good.

This, dear son,
is the Ariyan duty
of a sovran of the world.'

'Even so, sire,'
answered the anointed king,
and obeying,
carried out the Ariyan duty of a sovran lord.

To him, thus behaving,
when on the feast of the full moon
he had gone in due observance
with bathed head
to the chief upper terrace,
the Celestial Wheel revealed itself,
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
its navel,
and all its parts complete.

And seeing this
it occurred to the king:

'It has been told me
that a king to whom
on such an occasion
the Celestial Wheel reveals itself completely,
becomes a Wheel-turning monarch.

May I even I also
become a sovran of the world.'

Then, brethren,
the king arose from his seat,
and uncovering his robe from one shoulder,
took in his left hand a pitcher,
and with his right hand
sprinkled up over the Celestial Wheel,
saying:

'Roll onward, O lord Wheel!

Go forth and overcome, O lord Wheel!'

Then, brethren,
the Celestial Wheel rolled onwards
towards the region of the East,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the East
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions
as you have been wont to do.

Then, brethren, all they
that were enemy kings
in the region of the East
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Eastern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the South,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the South
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the South
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Southern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards
to the region of the West,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the West
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord, spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the West
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Western ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the North,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the North
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the North
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth
conquering over the whole earth
to its ocean boundary,
it returned to the royal city,
and stood,
so that one might think it fixed,
in front of the judgment hall
at the entrance to the inner apartments of the king,
the Wheel-turner,
lighting up with its glory
the facade of the inner apartments of the king,
the sovran of the world.

 

§

 

[The Seventh in the Line]

8.5. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
King Strongtyre commanded a certain man,
saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,' replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to King Strongtyre and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

Then the King, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son
be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge
over this earth bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.'

So, brethren, the King,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.

Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him,
saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then that king, brethren,
the anointed warrior,
was grieved thereat
and afflicted with sorrow.

And he went to the royal hermit
and told him,
saying:

'Know, sire, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.'

And the anointed king so saying,
the royal hermit made reply:

'Grieve thou not, dear son,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared,
nor be afflicted.

For no paternal heritage of thine,
dear son,
is the Celestial Wheel.

But verily, dear son, turn thou
in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners.

[Act up to the noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovrans of the world.]

Then it may well be
that if thou carry out the Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch,
and on the feast of the full moon
thou wilt go with bathed head
to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace,
lo! the Celestial Wheel will manifest itself
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
navel,
and all its parts complete.'

'But what, sire,
is this Ariyan duty
of a Wheel-turning Monarch?'

'This, dear son:
that thou,
leaning on the Norm
[the Law of truth and righteousness]
honouring, respecting and revering it,
doing homage to it,
hallowing it,
being thyself a Norm-banner,
a Norm-signal,
having the Norm as thy master,
shouldst provide the right watch, ward, and protection
for thine own folk,
for the army,
for the nobles,
for vassals,
for brahmins,
and householders,
for town and country dwellers,
for the religious world,
and for beasts and birds.

Throughout thy kingdom
let no wrongdoing prevail.

And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor,
to him let wealth be given.

And when, dear son,
in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising
from the intoxication of the senses,
and devoted to forbearance and sympathy,
each mastering self,
each calming self,
each perfecting self,
shall come to thee from time to time,
and question thee
concerning what is good and what is bad,
what is criminal and what is not,
what is to be done and what left undone,
what line of action will
in the long run
work for weal or for woe,
thou shouldst hear what they have to say,
and thou shouldst deter them from evil,
and bid them take up what is good.

This, dear son,
is the Ariyan duty
of a sovran of the world.'

'Even so, sire,'
answered the anointed king,
and obeying,
carried out the Ariyan duty of a sovran lord.

To him, thus behaving,
when on the feast of the full moon
he had gone in due observance
with bathed head
to the chief upper terrace,
the Celestial Wheel revealed itself,
with its thousand spokes,
its tyre,
its navel,
and all its parts complete.

And seeing this
it occurred to the king:

'It has been told me
that a king to whom
on such an occasion
the Celestial Wheel reveals itself completely,
becomes a Wheel-turning monarch.

May I even I also
become a sovran of the world.'

Then, brethren,
the king arose from his seat,
and uncovering his robe from one shoulder,
took in his left hand a pitcher,
and with his right hand
sprinkled up over the Celestial Wheel,
saying:

'Roll onward, O lord Wheel!

Go forth and overcome, O lord Wheel!'

Then, brethren,
the Celestial Wheel rolled onwards
towards the region of the East,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the East
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions
as you have been wont to do.

Then, brethren, all they
that were enemy kings
in the region of the East
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Eastern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the South,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the South
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the South
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Southern ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards
to the region of the West,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the West
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord, spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the West
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then, brethren, the Celestial Wheel,
plunging down into the Western ocean,
rose up out again,
and rolled onwards to the region of the North,
and after it went the Wheel-turning king,
and with him his army,
horses
and chariots
and elephants
and men.

And in whatever place, brethren,
the Wheel stopped,
there the king,
the victorious war-lord,
took up his abode,
and with him his fourfold army.

Then all the rival kings
in the region of the North
came to the sovran king and said:

'Come, O mighty king!

Welcome, O mighty king!

All is thine, O mighty king!

Teach us, O mighty king!'

The king, the sovran war-lord,
spake thus:

'Ye shall slay no living thing.

Ye shall not take that which has not been given.

Ye shall not act wrongly touching bodily desires.

Ye shall speak no lie.

Ye shall drink no maddening drink.

Enjoy your possessions as you have been wont to do.'

Then, brethren,
all they that were enemy kings
in the region of the North
became vassals to the king,
the Wheel-turner.

Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth
conquering over the whole earth
to its ocean boundary,
it returned to the royal city,
and stood,
so that one might think it fixed,
in front of the judgment hall
at the entrance to the inner apartments of the king,
the Wheel-turner,
lighting up with its glory
the facade of the inner apartments of the king,
the sovran of the world.

 

§

 

[The Eighth in the Line; Great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandson of Strongtyre:]

8.6. Now, brethren, after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years,
the King commanded a certain man, saying:

'If thou shouldst see, sirrah,
that the Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place,
bring me word.'

'Even so, sire,'
replied the man.

Now after many years,
after many hundred years,
after many thousand years
that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk,
had slipped down from its place.

On seeing that
he went to the King and said:

'Know, sire, for a truth
that thy Celestial Wheel has sunk,
has slipped down from its place.'

Then the King, brethren,
let the prince his eldest son be sent for,
and spake thus:

'Behold, dear boy,
my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little,
has slipped down from its place.

Now it has been told me:

"If the Celestial Wheel
of a Wheel-turning King
shall sink down,
shall slip down from its place,
that king has not much longer to live."

I have had my fill of human pleasures;
'tis time to seek after divine joys.

Come, dear boy,
take thou charge over this earth
bounded by the ocean.

But I,
shaving hair and beard,
and donning yellow robes,
will go forth from home
into the homeless state.

So, brethren, the King,
having in due form
established his eldest son on the throne,
shaved hair and beard,
donned yellow robes
and went forth from home
into the homeless state.

But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth,
the Celestial Wheel disappeared.

9. Then a certain man went to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and told him, saying:

'Know, O king, for a truth,
that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared!'

Then the king,
the anointed Kshatriya,
was grieved at the disappearance of the Wheel,
and afflicted with grief.

But he did not go to the hermit-king
to ask concerning the Ariyan Duty
of a sovran war-lord.

By his own ideas, forsooth,
he governed his people;
and they so governed,
differently from what they had been,
did not prosper
as they used to do under former kings
who had carried out the Ariyan duty
of a sovran king.

Then, brethren,
the ministers and courtiers,
the finance officials,
the guards and doorkeepers,
and they who lived by sacred verses[22]
came to the king,
the anointed warrior,
and spake thus:

[65] 'Thy people, O king,
whilst thou governest them
by thine own ideas,
differently from the way
to which they were used when former kings
were carrying out the Ariyan duty,
prosper not.

Now there are in thy kingdom
ministers and courtiers,
finance officers,
guards and custodians,
and they who live by sacred verses —
both all of us and others —
who keep the knowledge
of the Ariyan duty of a sovran king.

Lo! O king,
do thou ask us concerning it;
to thee thus asking
will we declare it.'

10. Then, brethren, the king,
the anointed warrior,
having made the ministers
and all the rest sit down together,
asked them about the Ariyan duty
of a sovran war-lord.

And they declared it unto him.

And when he had heard them,
he did provide the due watch and ward and protection,
but on the destitute [66] he bestowed no wealth.

And because this was not done,
poverty became widespread.[23]

When poverty was thus become rife,
a certain man took
that which others had not given him,
what people call by theft.

Him they caught,
and brought before the king,
saying:

'This man, O king, has taken
that which was not given him,
and that is theft.'

Thereupon the king spake thus to the man:

'Is it true, sirrah,
that thou hast taken
what no man gave thee,
hast committed what men call theft?'

'It is true, O king.'

'But why?'

'O king, I have nothing to keep me alive.'

[66] Then the king bestowed wealth on that man,
saying:

'With this wealth, sirrah,
do thou both keep thyself alive,
maintain thy parents,
maintain children and wife,
carry on thy business,
and keep up such alms for holy men
as shall be of value in the realms above,
heavenly gifts,
the result whereof shall be happiness here
and rebirth in the heavenly worlds.'

'Even so, O king',
replied the man.

11. Now another man, brethren,
took by theft
what was not given him.

Him they caught and brought before the king,
the anointed Kshatriya,
and told him, saying:

This man, O king,
hath taken by theft
what was not given him.

Thereupon the king spake thus to the man:

'Is it true, sirrah,
that thou hast taken
what no man gave thee,
hast committed what men call theft?'

'It is true, O king.'

'But why?'

'O king, I have nothing to keep me alive.'

Then the king bestowed wealth on that man,
saying:

'With this wealth, sirrah,
do thou both keep thyself alive,
maintain thy parents,
maintain children and wife,
carry on thy business,
and keep up such alms for holy men
as shall be of value in the realms above,
heavenly gifts,
the result whereof shall be happiness here
and rebirth in the heavenly worlds.'

'Even so, O king',
replied the man.

12. Now men heard, brethren,
that to them who had taken by theft
what was not given them,
the king was giving wealth.

And hearing they thought:

'Let us then take by theft
what has not been given us.'

[67] Now a certain man did so.

And him they caught
and charged before the king,
the anointed Kshatriya,
[67] and told him,
saying:

'This man, O king, hath taken by theft
what was not given him.'

Thereupon the king spake thus to the man:

'Is it true, sirrah,
that thou hast taken
what no man gave thee,
hast committed what men call theft?'

'It is true, O king.'

'But why?'

'Because, O king, I cannot maintain myself.'

Then the king thought:

'If I bestow wealth
on anyone soever
who has taken by theft
what was not given him,
there will be hereby
an increase of this stealing.

condign punishment [from Old French condigne, from Latin condignus, 'with dignity'] fitting, deserved, 'dignified' worthy of the crime.

p.p. explains it all — p.p.

Let me now put a final stop to this,
inflict condign punishment on him,
have his head cut off!'

So he bade his men saying:

'Now, look ye!
bind this man's arms behind him
with a strong rope
and a tight knot,
shave his head bald,
lead him around
with a harsh sounding drum,
from road to road,
from crossways to crossways,
take him out by the southern gate,
and to the south of the town,
put a final stop to this,
inflict on him the uttermost penalty,
cut off his head.'

'Even so, O king',
answered the men,
and carried out his commands.

13. Now men heard, brethren,
that they who took by theft
what was not given them,
were thus put to death.

And hearing, they thought:

'Let us also now have sharp swords
made ready for ourselves,
and them, from whom we take what is not given us[68]
what they call theft —
let us put a final stop to them,
inflict on them the uttermost penalty,
and cut their heads off.'

And they gat themselves sharp swords,
and came forth to sack village and town and city,
and to work highway robbery.

And them whom they robbed
they made an end of,
cutting off their heads.

14. Thus, brethren,
from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grew rife;
from poverty growing rife
stealing increased,
from the spread of stealing
violence grew apace,
from the growth of violence
the destruction of life became common,
from the frequency of murder[24]
both the span of life in those beings
and their comeliness also wasted away,
so that, [68] of humans whose span of life
was eighty thousand years,
the sons lived but forty thousand years.

Now among humans of the latter span of life, brethren,
a certain man took by theft
what was not given him.

And him they caught
and charged before the king,
the anointed Kshatriya,
and told him, saying:

'This man, O king, hath taken by theft
what was not given him.'

Thereupon the king spake thus to the man:

'Is it true, sirrah,
that thou hast taken what no man gave thee,
hast committed what men call theft?'

'Nay, O king',
he replied,
thus deliberately telling a lie.

15. Thus, brethren,
from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grew rife;
from poverty growing rife
stealing increased,
from the spread of stealing
violence grew apace,
from the growth of violence
the destruction of life became common,
from the frequency of murder
lying grew common.

[69] And from lying growing common
both the span of life in those beings
and the comeliness of them wasted away,
so that of humans whose span of life
was forty thousand years,
the sons lived but twenty thousand years.

Now among humans of the latter life-span,
a certain man took by theft
what was not given him.

Him a certain man reported to the king,
the anointed Kshatriya, saying:

'Such and such a man, O king,
has taken by theft
what was not given him' —
thus speaking evil of him.

16. And so, brethren,
from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grew rife;
from poverty growing rife
stealing increased,
from the spread of stealing
violence grew apace,
from the growth of violence
the destruction of life became common,
from the frequency of murder
lying grew common,
from lying growing common,
evil speaking grew abundant.

And from evil speaking growing abundant,
both the life-span of those beings
and also the comeliness of them wasted away,
so that, of humans whose life-span
was twenty thousand years,
the sons live but ten thousand years.

Now among humans of the latter span of life, brethren,
some were comely and some were ugly.

And so those who were ugly,
coveting them that were comely,
committed adultery
with their neighbours' wives.

17. Thus from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grew rife;
from poverty growing rife
stealing increased,
from the spread of stealing
violence grew apace,
from the growth of violence
the destruction of life became common,
from the frequency of murder
lying grew common,
from lying growing common,
evil speaking grew abundant,
from evil speaking growing abundant,
immorality grew rife.

And from the increase of immorality,
both the life-span of those beings
and also the comeliness of [69] them wasted away,
so that, of humans whose lifespan
was ten thousand years,
the sons lived but five thousand years.

Now among humans of the latter span of life, brethren,
two things increased:
abusive speech
and idle talk.

And from these two things increasing,
both the life-span of those beings
and the comeliness of them wasted away,
so that, of humans whose life-span
was five [70] thousand years,
some sons lived but two and a half,
some but two thousand years.

Among humans of a life-span
of two thousand years and a half,
covetousness and ill-will waxed great.

And thereby both the life-span of those beings
and the comeliness of them wasted away,
so that, of humans whose life-span
was two and a half,
or two thousand years,
the sons lived but a thousand years.

Among humans of the latter span of life, brethren,
false opinions grew.

And thereby the life-span of those beings
and the comeliness of them wasted,
so that, of humans whose span of life
was a thousand years,
the sons lived but five hundred years.

Among humans of the latter span of life, brethren,
three things grew apace:
incest, wanton greed, and perverted lust.

Thereby the life-span of those beings
and their comeliness wasted,
so that, of humans whose span of life
was five hundred years,
some sons lived but two and a half centuries,
some only two centuries.

Among humans of a life-span, brethren,
of two and a half centuries,
these things grew apace —
lack of filial piety to mother and father,
lack of religious piety to holy men,
lack of regard for the head of the clan.[25]

18. Thus, brethren,
from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grew rife;
from poverty growing rife
stealing increased,
from the spread of stealing
violence grew apace,
from the growth of violence
the destruction of life became common,
from the frequency of murder
lying grew common,
from lying growing common,
evil speaking grew abundant,
from evil speaking growing abundant,
adultery grew common,
from adultery growing common
abusive and idle talk grew common,
from [71] abusive and idle talk growing common,
covetousness and ill-will grew common,
from covetousness and ill-will growing common,
false opinions grew common,
from false opinions growing common,
incest,
wanton greed
and perverted lust grew common,
finally from incest, wanton greed and perverted lust growing common
lack lack of filial and religious piety
and lack of regard for the head of the clan grew great.

From these things growing,
the [70] life-span of those beings
and the comeliness of them wasted,
so that, of humans whose span of life
was two and a half centuries,
the sons lived but one century.

19. There will come a time, brethren,
when the descendants of those humans
will have a life-span of ten years.

Among humans of this life-span,
maidens of five years
will be of a marriageable age.

Among such humans
these kinds of tastes (savours)
will disappear:
ghee,
butter,
oil of tila,
sugar,
salt.

Among such humans
kudrusa grain[26]
will be the highest kind of food.

Even as to-day rice and curry
is the highest kind of food,
so will kudrusa grain be then.

Among such humans
the ten moral courses of conduct
will altogether disappear,
the ten immoral courses of action[27]
will flourish excessively;
there will be no word[28] for moral
among such humans —
far less any moral agent.

Among such humans, brethren,
they who lack filial [72] and religious piety,
and show no respect for the head of the clan —
'tis they to whom homage and praise will be given,
just as today homage and praise are given
to the filial-minded,
to the pious
and to them who respect the heads of their clans.

20. Among such humans, brethren,
there will be no [such thoughts of reverence
as are a bar to inter-marriage with]
mother,
or mother's sister,
or mother's sister-in-law,
or teacher's wife,
or father's sister-in-law.[29]

The world will fall into promiscuity,
like goats and sheep,
fowls and swine,
dogs and jackals.

Among such humans, brethren,
keen mutual enmity
will become the rule,
keen ill-will,
keen animosity,
passionate thoughts
even of killing,
in a mother towards her child,
in a child towards its mother,
in a father towards his child
and a child towards its father,
in [71] brother to brother,
in brother to sister,
in sister to brother.

Just as a sportsman
feels towards the game[30] that he sees,
so will they feel.

[73] 21. Among such humans, brethren,
there will arise a sword-period[31]
of seven days during which
they will look on each other as wild beasts;
sharp swords will appear ready to their hands,
and they, thinking
'This is a wild beast,
this is a wild beast,'
will with their swords
deprive each other of life.

Then to some of those beings it will occur:

'Let us not slay just anyone;
nor let just anyone slay us!

Let us now, therefore,
betake ourselves to dens of grass,
or dens in the jungle,
or holes in trees,
or river fastnesses,
or mountain clefts,
and subsist on roots and fruits of the jungle.'

And they will do so
for those seven days.

And at the end of those seven days,
coming forth from those dens
and fastnesses
and mountain clefts,
they will embrace each other,
and be of one accord[32]
comforting one another,
and saying:

'Hail, O mortal,
that thou livest still!

O happy sight to find thee still alive!'

Then this, brethren,
will occur to those beings:

'Now, only because we had gotten into evil ways,
have we had this heavy loss of kith and kin.

Let us therefore now do good.

What can we do that is good?

Let us now abstain from taking life.

That is a good thing
that we may take up and do.

And they will abstain from slaughter,
and will continue in this good way.

Because of their getting into this good way,
they will increase again
both as to their span of life
and as to their comeliness.

[74] And to them thus increasing
in life and comeliness,
to them who [72] lived but one decade,
there will be children
who will live for twenty years.

22. Then this, brethren,
will occur to those beings:

'Now we,
because we have gotten into good ways,
increase in length of life and comeliness.

Let us now do still more good.

Let us now abstain from taking what is not given,
let us abstain from adultery,
let us now abstain from lying,
let us now abstain from evil speaking,
let us now abstain from abuse
and from idle talk,
let us now abstain from covetousness,
from ill-will,
from false opinions,
let us now abstain from the three things
— incest, wanton greed and perverted desires;
let us now be filial
towards our mothers and our fathers,
let us be pious toward holy men,
let us respect the heads of clans,
yea, let us continue to practise
each of these good things.'

So they will practise these virtues,
and they abstain from taking what is not given,
they abstain from adultery,
they abstain from lying,
they abstain from evil speaking,
they abstain abstain from abuse and from idle talk,
they abstain abstain from covetousness,
they abstain from ill-will,
from false opinions,
they abstain from the three things
— incest, wanton greed and perverted desires;
they become filial
towards mothers and fathers,
pious toward holy men,
respectful of the heads of clans.

And because of the good they do
they will increase in length of life,
and in comeliness,
so that the sons of them
who lived but twenty years,
will come to live forty years.

And the sons of these sons
will come to live eighty years;
their sons to 160 years;
their sons to 320 years;
their sons to 640 years;
their sons to 2,000 years;
their sons to 4,000 years;
their sons to 8,000 years;
their sons to 20,000 years;
their sons to 40,000 [75] years;
and the sons of those that lived 40,000 years
will come to live 80,000 years.

23. Among humans living 80,000 years, brethren,
maidens are marriageable
at 500 years of age.

Among such humans
there will be only three kinds of disease
— appetite, non-assimilation and old age.

Among such humans,
this India[33] will be mighty and prosperous,
the villages, towns and royal cities
will be so close that a cock could fly
from each one to the next.[34]

Among [73] such humans
this India
— one might think it a Waveless Deep[35]
will be pervaded by mankind
even as a jungle is by reeds and rushes.

Among such humans
the Benares of our day[36]
will be named Ketumatī,
a royal city, mighty and prosperous,
full of people,
crowded and well fed.

Among such humans in this India
there will be 84,000 towns,
with Ketumatī the royal city at their head.

24. Among such humans, brethren,
at Ketumatī the royal city,
there will arise Sankha,
a Wheel-turning king,
righteous and ruling in righteousness,
lord of the four quarters,
conqueror,
protector of his people,
possessor of the seven precious things.

His will be these seven precious things,
to wit:
the Wheel,
the Elephant,
the Horse,
the Gem,
the Woman,
the House-father,
the Councillor.

More than a thousand also
will be his offspring,
heroes, vigorous of frame,
crushers of the hosts of the enemy.

He will live in supremacy
over this earth
to its ocean bounds,
having conquered it
not by the scourge,
not by the sword,
but by righteousness.

25. At that period, brethren,
[76] there will arise [74] in the world
an Exalted One named Metteyya,
Arahant,
Fully Awakened,
abounding in wisdom and goodness,
happy,
with knowledge of the worlds,
unsurpassed as a guide
to mortals willing to be led,
a teacher for gods and men,
an Exalted One,
a Buddha,
even as I am now.

He, by himself,
will thoroughly know and see,
as it were face to face,
this universe,
with its worlds of the spirits,
its Brahmās and its Māras,
and its world of recluses and brahmins,
of princes and peoples,
even as I now, by myself,
thoroughly know and see them.

The truth [the Norm]
lovely in its origin,
lovely in its progress,
lovely in its consummation,
will he proclaim,
both in the spirit and in the letter,
the higher life will he make known,
in all its fullness
and in all its purity,
even as I do now.

He will be accompanied by a congregation
of some thousands of brethren,
even as I am now accompanied by a congregation
of some hundreds of brethren.

26. Then, brethren, King Sankha will raise up again
the fairy palace
which the King Great Panāda
had had built.[37]

And therein will he dwell.

But afterwards
he will give it away,
hand it over as a gift
to recluses and brahmins,
to the destitute,
wayfarers and beggars.

And he himself,
cutting off hair and beard,
will don the yellow robes,
and leave his home
for the life that is homeless
under Metteyya the Exalted One,
the Arahant fully awakened.

And he, having thus left the world,
will remain alone and separate,
earnest, zealous and master of himself.

And ere long he will attain
to that supreme goal
for the sake of which
clansmen go forth from the [77] household life
into the homeless state;
yea, that supreme goal will he,
while yet in this visible world,
bring himself to the knowledge of,
and continue to realize and to know!

27. Live as islands unto yourselves, brethren,
as refuges unto yourselves,
take none other as your refuge,
live with the Norm as your island,
with the Norm as your refuge,
take none other as your refuge.

[75] But how, brethren,
does a brother live
as an island unto himself,
as a refuge unto himself,
taking no other as his refuge?

How does he live
with the Norm as his island,
with the Norm as his refuge,
taking no other refuge?

Herein, brethren,
a brother as to the body,
as to the feelings,
as to thought,
as to ideas, continues so to look upon these
that he remains ardent,
self-possessed,
and mindful,
that he may overcome both the hankering
and the dejection
common in the world.

Thus, brethren,
does a brother live as an island unto himself,
as a refuge unto himself,
taking no other as his refuge?

Thus, brethren,
does a brother live with the Norm as his island,
with the Norm as his refuge,
taking no other refuge.

28. Keep to your own pastures, brethren,
walk in the haunts where your fathers roamed.

If ye so walk,
ye shall grow in length of years,
ye shall grow in comeliness,
ye shall grow in happiness,
ye shall grow in wealth,
ye shall grow in power.

And what is the meaning
of length of years to a brother?

Herein that a brother practises
the Four Roads to Iddhi,[38]
to wit:
action, effort, and concentration
applied to desire,
to energy,
to [the whole] consciousness,
and to investigation.

From practising and developing
these Four Roads,
he may, if he so desire,
live on for an aeon,
or the remainder of an aeon.

This is the meaning
of length of years
to a brother.

And what is the meaning
of comeliness
to a brother?

Herein, that a brother live
in the practice of right conduct,
restrained according to the Rules of the Order,
perfect in behaviour and habitude;
he sees danger
in the least of the things he should avoid
and, taking the precepts[39] on himself,
he trains himself therein.

This is comeliness for a brother.

And what is the meaning
of happiness for a brother?

Herein, that a brother
estranged from lusts,
aloof from evil dispositions,
enters into and remains in the First Jhāna
— a state of zest and ease born of detachment,
application and persistence of attention
going on the while.

Then suppressing all application and persist- [76] ence of attention,
he enters into and abides in the Second Jhāna,
a state of zest and ease,
born of the serenity of concentration,
wherein the mind is lifted up alone,
and the heart grows calm within.

And entering into the Third Jhāna
he abides calmly contemplative
while, mindful and self-possessed,
feeling in his body that ease
whereof Aryans declare
'He that is calmly contemplative and aware,
he dwelleth at ease.'

And by putting aside ease
and by putting aside malaise,
by the passing away of the happiness
and of the melancholy
he used to feel,
he enters into and abides in the Fourth Jhāna,
rapture of utter purity
of mindfulness and equanimity,
wherein neither ease is felt
nor any ill.[ed1]

This is happiness for a brother.

And what is the meaning of wealth for a brother?

Herein that a brother abides
letting his mind fraught with love
pervade one quarter of the world,
and so too the second quarter,
and so the third,
and so the fourth.

And thus the whole wide world,
above, below, around, and everywhere,
and altogether does he continue to pervade
with love-burdened thought,
abounding, sublime, and beyond measure,
free from hatred and ill will.

And he lets his mind
fraught with pity
pervade one quarter of the world,
and so too the second quarter,
and so the third,
and so the fourth.

And thus the whole wide world,
above, below, around, and everywhere,
and altogether does he continue to pervade
with pity-burdened thought,
abounding, sublime, and beyond measure,
free from hatred and ill will.

And he lets his mind fraught with sympathy
pervade one quarter of the world,
and so too the second quarter,
and so the third,
and so the fourth.

And thus the whole wide world,
above, below, around, and everywhere,
and altogether does he continue to pervade
with sympathy-burdened thought,
abounding, sublime, and beyond measure,
free from hatred and ill will.

And he lets his mind
fraught with equanimity
pervade one quarter of the world,
and so too the second quarter,
and so the third,
and so the fourth.

And thus the whole wide world,
above, below, around, and everywhere,
and altogether does he continue to pervade with equanimity-burdened thought,
abounding, sublime, and beyond measure,
free from hatred and ill will.

This is wealth for a brother.

And what is the meaning of power for a brother?

Herein, that a brother,
by destruction of the deadly taints,
enters into and abides in
that untainted emancipation of mind
and of insight,
which he by himself
has both known and realized.[40]

This is power for a brother.

I consider no power, brethren,
so hard to subdue
as the power of Māra.

But this merit
[the merit of these four groups of ethical concepts, beginning at Right Conduct, and culminating in Arahantship][41]
expands, brethren,
by the taking up into oneself
of that which is good."

Thus spake the Exalted One.

Glad at heart the brethren rejoiced at the words of the Exalted One.

Here ends the Cakka-Vatti Sīhanāda Suttantaɱ

 


[1] Kūṭadanta and Sakka-Pañha.

[2] See Buddhist India, p. 234.

[3] Dialogues of the Buddha I, 209-218. See also Oldenberg, Religion du Veda (R. Henry), 344-347.

[4] For some of these divergent and contradictory meanings see Proceedings of the Oxford Congress of Religions, 1908.

[5] Dialogues of the Buddha Vol. I, pp. 16-30.

[6] This and the next Suttanta have been excellently translated into German by R. Otto Franke, in his selections from the Dīgha Nikāya, Gottingen, 1913, pp. 260 ff.

[7] Twenty in number. Comy..

[8] Dīpa, lamp, or island. Buddhaghosa here takes to mean island: as an island in the midst of the ocean make self the terra firma. Cf. above, II, 100.

[9] As above, II, 327 ff.

[10] Ib., p. 325.

[11] Gocara: cattle-range.

[12] Pettike visaye: or your native beat. This injunction forms the moral in the Jātaka of the Quail and the Falcon (II, 59)[No. 168]. It must have been an old story, for it is told already (not as a Jātaka) in Saɱyutta V, 146, 147. The parable must have been familiar in the oldest Buddhist period and should be added to the list given in Buddhist India, p. 195.

[13] On the omission here of an anointed Kshatriya, see II, 199, n. 2.

[14] Cf. II, 13.

[15] Like the extinguished flame of a lamp. Comy..

[16] I.e. do good (make good karma) as I did, and earn the Wheel. Cf. the Great King of Glory's reflection, II, 218.

[17] It is impossible to render the pregnant phrase into intelligible English without a paraphrase. There is a play upon the words vatta, and Ariya. Vatta means turning, but also duty (the way one ought to turn). Franke has Widme dich der hohen Cakkavatti-Pflicht. On the threefold meaning of Ar(i)yan — racial, ethical, and aesthetic — see Rhys Davids, Early Buddhism, 49, 50. On the new meaning here put into the curious word Wheel-turner, see Introduction.

[18] 'The Norm' is 'Dhamma'. We must coin a word for this. Both French and Germans have a better word in droit and Recht, each of which means both law and right. See Mrs. Rhys Davids above, II, 325, and Buddhism (1912), 227. The whole passage in the Pali is a striking outburst on the superiority of right over might, on the ideal of empire as held by the early Buddhists. Its eloquence has suffered much in our translation.

[19] Cf. II, p. 202.

[20] In this parody on the ordinary methods of conquest all the horrors and crimes of war are absent. The conqueror simply follows the bright and beneficent Wheel, and the conquered, with joy and trust, ask only for instruction.

[21] Yathābhuttaɱ bhuñjatha. But see above, II, 203, and Franke, op. cit., 263. To enjoy this paragraph as it deserves the reader should bear in mind the kind of method of which it is a parody, the laws that would be made, say, by an Assyrian or Hun conqueror, with a motto of frightfulness, for his conquered foes. Saɱyutta I, 10 (Kindred Sayings I, 15, n. 1) has a similar play on the various meanings of bhutvā.

[22] Mantass'ajīvino — that is, the magicians, brahmins.

[23] It should be noticed that this king is apparently doing his best — what he thinks is best — and yet that his action leads to long-continued and disastrous results. It is as if a man, doing his best, goes under a tree for protection during a storm, and is struck by lightning attracted by the tree. The cosmic law, the Dhamma, the Norm, acts on in the realm of morals as it does in the realm of physics. The law is inexpugnable, res inexorabilis. If the law is not observed, the consequences are inevitable.

[24] Some MSS. include lying in this series.

[25] Kula-seṭṭha, not to be confused with gahapati, the head of the family.

[26] Cf. Milinda II, 267. It is a kind of rye. Franke compares it with Sanskrit koraduṣa.

[27] Given in the Vibhanga, p. 391. They are very nearly those referred to above.

[28] Neither term — kusalan ti nāmaɱ — nor concept — paññatti-mattam pi — says Buddhaghosa.

[29] Lit. wives of garu's (guru's). The Comy. interprets this to mean wives of little father or great father — i.e. wives of father's brothers, younger and older.

[30] Migo, deer, is capable of meaning all game, or wild animals.

[31] Satth'antara-kappa. Sattha is sword; antara-kappa is a period included in another period. Here the first period, the one included, is seven days. See Ledi Sadaw in the Buddhist Review, January, 1916.

[32] Sabhāgāyissanti. Both text and commentary are corrupt. Perhaps one should read sabhāgā bhavissanti (one of three consecutive and very similar aksharas having fallen out). In the next clause read satta.

[33] Jambudīpa, this world (1oko at Aṅguttara, I 1 59).

[34] Kukkuṭa-sampātikā, lit. cock's-flightish. R. Morris discusses this phrase in vain, J.P.T.S., 1885, p. 38. At Divyāvadana, p. 316, the editors (in the Index) give it up and suggest reading kakura. Franke here translates 'resembling flocks of birds.' Compare also Vinaya IV, 131. Buddhaghosa says here that another reading, kukkuṭa-sampādikā is also possible in the sense of within a cock's walk, which amounts to much the same thing as the translation adopted above. [Ed.: See Tao Te Ching for another possible explanation of this term.]

Tertium quid. An unknown but suspected to exist element in combination with known elements. The essential, known element in 'Avīci' is 'uninteruptedness.' It's use for a description of Hell is in connection with the idea of unremitting pain.

p.p. explains it all — p.p.

[35] Avīci. The tertium quid of this comparison is obscure. The Waveless Deep was, in later books, one of the purgatories. We, in this twentieth century, may well think a country so densely populated a purgatory. But the authors of our document are evidently speaking in praise, not disparagement of the density of the population. Can the Waveless Deep, in this connexion, have been originally used in that sense? Buddhaghosa naturally explains it so, but that is not conclusive. The word does not occur in the four Nikāyas except in this passage (which recurs at Aṅguttara I, 159). It does not occur in the list of the purgatories given in the Sutta Nipāta (pp. 121-7) and Samyutta I, 154. It is found in a poem in the Itivuttaka (No. 89), which recurs in the Vinaya (II, 203), and in the Dhamma-Sangani, § 1,281. But the history of Avīci and of the purgatory idea in India has yet to be written. In Vis. Magga avīci = disintegration (p 449).

[36] Ayaɱ Bārānasī. As the discourse was said to have been delivered in Magadha, the allusion must have been rather to the city as contemporary than to any contiguity in space. But perhaps the story may have had its origin among the Kāsis.

[37] See the passages quoted in Psalms of the Brethren, p. 130. It had been sunk in the Ganges at Payāga.

[38] Cf. II, 128 f.

[39] Cf. I, 79.

[40] That is to say, the Fruition of Arahantship. Comy.

[41] This is added from Buddhaghosa. He does not think that the merit referred to is the conquest of Māra. That follows from the destruction of the mental intoxications. See above, I, 92, and § I of this Suttanta.

 


[ed1] Rhys Davids abbreviates the third and Fourth Jhāna, and working back the closest near description is found in DN 22, where the translation of the first and second Jhānas are somewhat different. Here is his translation from that sutta:

Herein, O bhikkhus, a brother, aloof from sensuous appetites, aloof from evil ideas, enters into and abides in the First Jhāna, wherein there is cogitation and deliberation, which is born of solitude and is full of joy and ease.

Suppressing cogitation and deliberation he enters into and abides in the Second Jhāna, which is self-evoked, born of concentration, full of joy and ease, in that, set free from cogitation and deliberation the mind grows calm and sure, dwelling on high.

And further, disenchanted with joy, he abides calmly contemplative while, mindful and self-possessed, he feel in his body that ease whereof Aryans declare 'He that is calmly contemplative and aware, he dwelleth at ease.' So does he enter into and abide in the Third Jhāna.

And further, by putting aside ease and by putting aside malaise, by the passing away of the happiness and of the melancholy he used to feel, he enters into and abides in the Fourth Jhāna, rapture of utter purity of mindfulness and equanimity, wherein neither ease is felt nor any ill.

Working forward, there is still another version in DN 29:

...aloof from sensuous appetites, aloof from evil ideas, enters into and abides in the First Jhāna, wherein there is initiative and sustained thought which is born of solitude and is full of zest and ease.

Secondly, when suppressing initiative and sustained thought, he enters into and abides in the Second Jhāna, which is self-evoked, born of concentration, full of zest and ease, in that, set fre from initial and sustained thought, the mind grows calm and sure, dwelling on high.

Thirdly, when a brother, no longer fired with zest, abides calmly contemplative, while mindful and self-possessed he feels in his body that ease whereof Ariyans declare: He that is calm contemplative and aware, he dwelleth at ease, so does he enter into and abide in the Third Jhāna.

Fourthly, by putting aside ease and by putting aside malaise, by the passing away of the joy and the sorrow he used to feel, he enters into and abides in the Fourth Jhāna, rapture of utter purity of mindfulness and equanimity, wherein neither ease is felt nor any ill.


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