-
Bhūridatta Jātaka (No.543)
Prince Brahmadatta, son of the king of Benares, lived on the banks of the
Yamunā, exiled from his father's kingdom. He wore the garb of an ascetic, but
his heart was not in the ascetic life, and, when a Nāga maiden tried to seduce
him, he easily succumbed. Their children were Sāgara Brahmadatta and Samuddajā.
When the king of Benares died, Brahmadatta returned with his children to the
kingdom and his Nāga wife returned to the Nāga world. While playing about in a
lake specially prepared for them, the children of Brahmadatta discovered a
tortoise, Cittacūla, and were much frightened. Cittacūla was brought before the
king and was ordered to be cast into the Yamunā, that being the direst penalty
the king could envisage. Caught in a whirlpool, Cittacūla was carried to the
realm of the Nāgaking Dhatarattha, and, when questioned, had the presence of
mind to say that he had been sent from Benares to propose a marriage between
Dhatarattha and Samuddajā. Nāga messengers were sent to the Benares court to
make arrangements, and they laid their proposal before the king. Cittacūla had
meanwhile spirited himself away. Brahmadatta was horrified at the proposals of
the messengers, and did not fail to say so, whereupon Dhatarattha was so
incensed at the insult offered to him that he laid siege to Benares with his
Nāga hosts. To avert the total destruction of the city, Samuddajā was given to
Dhatarattha, with whom she dwelt for a long time without discovering that she
was in the Nāga world, everyone, at the king's orders, having assumed human
form. Samuddajā had four children - Sudassana, Datta, Subhaga and Arittha
(Kānārittha) - and one step daughter, Accimukhī. Datta, who was the
Bodhisatta, used to visit Virūpakkha, the ruler of the Nāga hosts, and one day
went with him to pay homage to Sakka. In the assembly a question arose which
only Datta could answer, and Sakka was so pleased with him that he gave him the
name of Bhūridatta (wise Datta). Anxious to be born in Sakka's company,
Bhūridatta took the vows and observed the fast, lying on the top of an ant hill.
At the end of the fast, Nāga maidens would come and take him back.
One day a brahmin villager and his son, Somadatta, went hunting in the forest
and spent the night on a banyan tree near where Bhūridatta lay. At dawn, these
two saw the Nāga maidens come for Bhūridatta and witnessed their song and dance,
which Bhūridatta, having laid aside his snake form, much enjoyed. Discovering
the presence of the villagers, Bhūridatta entered into conversation with them,
and invited them to the Nāga world, where they passed a whole year, enjoying
great luxury. Owing to lack of merit, the villagers grew discontented and wished
to return to the world of men on the pretext that they wished to become
ascetics. Bhūridatta offered them a wish conferring jewel, but this they
refused, saying that they had no use for it. Once in the world of men, Somadatta
and his father took off their ornaments to bathe, but these divine ornaments
disappeared to the Nāga world.
Some time later, while father and son were wandering about in the forest,
having returned from stalking deer, they met a brahmin called
Alambāyana, who possessed a Nāga jewel. He
was a poor man of Benares who had fled into the forest to escape his creditors.
There he had met an ascetic, Kosiya, to whom a Garuda king had taught the
ālambāyana spell which was potent to tame Nāgas. The Garuda had torn up a banyan
tree, which shaded the ascetic's walk. A Nāga, which the Garuda had seized,
coiled itself round the tree, but the Garuda carried the tree with the Nāga on
it. When he discovered that he had done the ascetic an injury in pulling up the
tree, he felt repentant and taught the ascetic the Ālambāyana spell by way of
atonement. The ascetic, in turn, taught it to the poor brahmin, hoping it would
help him. The brahmin, now called Ālambāyana, left the ascetic and, while
wandering about, came across some Nāgas, carrying Bhūridatta's jewel. They heard
him recite the spell and fled in terror, leaving behind them the jewel, which he
picked up.
When Somadatta and his father met the brahmin, they saw the jewel, and the
father schemed to steal it. He told Ālambāyana of the difficulties connected
with guarding the jewel and of how dangerous it might prove, if not duly
honoured. If Ālambāyana would give him the jewel, he would show him the abode of
Bhūridatta, whom the brahmin might then capture, making money with his help.
When Somadatta realized his father's treachery, he rebuked him and fled from
him. Ālambāyana went with the villager and captured Bhūridatta and crushed his
bones. Having thus rendered the Nāga helpless. Ālambāyana put him in a basket
and travelled about making him dance before large audiences The jewel, which
ālambāyana gave to the treacherous villager, slipped from the later's hand and
returned to the Nāga world.
On the day of the capture of Bhūridatta, his mother had a terrifying dream,
and later, when Bhūridatta had been absent for a month, she grew very anxious
and lamented piteously. A search was instituted - Kānārittha was sent to the
deva world, Subhaga to Himavā, Sudassana and Accimukhī to the world of men.
Sudassana went disguised as an ascetic, and Accimukhī, assuming the form of a
frog, hid in his matted hair. They found Ālambāyana making ready to give an
exhibition of Bhūridatta's dancing before the king of Benares. Sudassana took up
his stand at the edge of the crowd, and Bhūridatta, seeing him, went up to him.
The crowd retreated in fear. When Bhūridatta was back in his basket, Sudassana
challenged Ālambāyana to prove that his magic powers were greater than those of
Sudassana. This challenge was accepted, and Sudassana called out to Accimukhī
who, uttering the frog's cry, stood on his shoulder, and having spat drops of
poison on to his palm, went back into his hair. Saying that the country would be
destroyed if the poison fell on the earth, Sudassana had three holes dug, and
filled the first with drugs, the second with cow dung, and the third with
heavenly medicines. He poured the poison into the first hole; a flame instantly
burst out, spread to the second, and, having travelled on to the third, consumed
all the medicines and was extinguished. Ālambāyana was standing near the last
hole: the heat of the poison smote him, the colour of his skin changed, and he
became a leper. Filled with terror, he set the Nāga free. Bhūridatta assumed a
radiant form decked with all ornaments; so did Sudassana and Accimukhī. The
king, on discovering that they were the children of Samuddajā, rejoiced greatly
and entertained them. Bhūridatta returned to the Nāga world, the king
accompanying him. The king stayed there for some days and then returned to his
kingdom.
Subhaga, in the course of his wanderings, came across Somadatta's father,
and, on discovering that it was he who had betrayed Bhūridatta, snatched him
away into the Nāga world, after first nearly drowning him in the whirlpools of
the Yamunā. Kānārittha, who was guarding the entrance to the room where
Bhūridatta lay ill and tired after his experiences, protested against Subhaga's
ill treatment of a brahmin, and described the greatness of the brahmins and the
importance of holding sacrifices and of learning the Vedas. The Nāgas, who were
listening, were greatly impressed, and Bhūridatta, seeing them in danger of
accepting false doctrine, sent for Kānārittha, confuted his arguments, and
converted the Nāgas to the right view. Some time after, Bhūridatta, with his
retinue, and followed by Dhatarattha, Samuddajā, and their other children,
visited his grandfather Brahmadatta, who had become an ascetic. There they met
Sāgara Brahmadatta, now king of Benares, and great was the rejoicing over their
reunion. Samuddajā then returned with her family to the Nāga world, where they
lived happily to the end of their days.
The story was related in reference to some laymen of Sāvatthi who kept the
fast diligently.
Devadatta is identified with Ālambāyana, Ananda with Somadatta, Uppalavannā
with Accimukhī, Sāriputta with Sudassana, Moggallāna with Subhaga, and
Sunakkhatta with Kānārittha (J.vi.157 219).
The story of Bhūridatta is found also in the Cariyāpitaka (Cyp.ii.2) as the
Bhūridatta cariyā, to illustrate Sīlapāramitā. In the fifteenth century
Ratthasāra, a monk of Ava, wrote a metrical version of the Bhūridatta Jātaka.
Sās.99.

|