The Light of Asia/Book the Eighth

A broad mead spreads by swift Kohana's bank
At Nagara; five days shall bring a man
In ox-wain thither from Benares' shrines
Eastward and northward journeying. The horns
Of white Himala look upon the place,
Which all the year is glad with blooms and girt
By groves made green from that bright streamlet's wave.
Soft are its slopes and cool its fragrant shades,
And holy all the spirit of the spot
Unto this time: the breath of eve comes hushed
Over the tangled thickets, and high heaps
Of carved red stones cloven by root and stem
Of creeping fig, and clad with waving veil
Of leaf and grass. The still snake glistens forth
From crumbled work of lac and cedar-beams
To coil his folds there on deep-graven slabs;
The lizard dwells and darts o'er painted floors
Where kings have paced; the grey fox litters safe
Under the broken thrones; only the peaks,
And stream, and sloping lawns, and gentle air
Abide unchanged. All else, like all fair shows
Of life, are fled--for this is where it stood,
The city of Suddhodana, the hill
Whereon, upon an eve of gold and blue
At sinking sun Lord Buddha set himself
To teach the Law in hearing of his own.

Lo! ye shall read it in the Sacred Books
How, being met in that glad pleasaunce-place--
A garden in old days with hanging walks,
Fountains, and tanks, and rose-banked terraces
Girdled by gay pavilions and the sweep
Of stately palace-fronts--the Master sate
Eminent, worshipped, all the earnest throng
Catching the opening of his lips to learn
That wisdom which hath made our Asia mild;
Whereto four hundred crores of living souls
Witness this day. Upon the King's right hand
He sate, and round were ranged the Sakya Lords
Ananda, Devadatta--all the Court.
Behind stood Seriyut and Mugallan, chiefs
Of the calm brethren in the yellow garb,
A goodly company. Between his knees
Rahula smiled with wondering childish eyes
Bent on the awful face, while at his feet
Sate sweet Yasodhara, her heartaches gone,
Foreseeing that fair love which doth not feed
On fleeting sense, that life which knows no age,
That blessed last of deaths when Death is dead,
His victory and hers. Wherefore she laid
Her hand upon his hands, folding around
Her silver shoulder-cloth his yellow robe,
Nearest in all the world to him whose words
The Three Worlds waited for. I cannot tell
A small part of the splendid lore which broke
From Buddha's lips: I am a late-come scribe
Who love the Master and his love of men,
And tell this legend, knowing he was wise,
But have not wit to speak beyond the books;
And time hath blurred their script and ancient sense,
Which once was new and mighty, moving all.
A little of that large discourse I know
Which Buddha spake on the soft Indian eve.
Also I know it writ that they who heard
Were more--lakhs more--crores more--than could be seen,
For all the Devas and the Dead thronged there,
Till Heaven was emptied to the seventh zone
And uttermost dark Hells opened their bars;
Also the daylight lingered past its time
In rose-leaf radiance on the watching peaks,
So that it seemed night listened in the glens,
And noon upon the mountains; yea! they write,
The evening stood between them like some maid
Celestial, love-struck, rapt; the smooth-rolled clouds
Her braided hair; the studded stars the pearls
And diamonds of her coronal; the moon
Her forehead jewel, and the deepening dark
Her woven garments. 'T was her close-held breath
Which came in scented sighs across the lawns
While our Lord taught, and, while he taught, who heard--
Though he were stranger in the land, or slave,
High caste or low, come of the Aryan blood,
Or Mlech or Jungle-dweller--seemed to hear
What tongue his fellows talked. Nay, outside those
Who crowded by the river, great and small,
The birds and beasts and creeping things--'t is writ--
Had sense of Buddha's vast embracing love
And took the promise of his piteous speech;
So that their lives--prisoned in shape of ape,
Tiger, or deer, shagged bear, jackal, or wolf,
Foul-feeding kite, pearled dove, or peacock gemmed,
Squat toad, or speckled serpent, lizard, bat,
Yea, or of fish fanning the river waves--
Touched meekly at the skirts of brotherhood
With man who hath less innocence than these;
And in mute gladness knew their bondage broke
Whilst Buddha spake these things before the King:

Om, Amitaya! measure not with words
     Th' Immeasurable; nor sink the string of thought
Into the Fathomless. Who asks doth err,
     Who answers, errs. Say nought!

The Books teach Darkness was, at first of all,
     And Brahm, sole meditating in that Night;
Look not for Brahm and the Beginning there!
     Nor him, nor any light

Shall any gazer see with mortal eyes,
     Or any searcher know by mortal mind,
Veil after veil will lift--but there must be
     Veil upon veil behind.

Stars sweep and question not. This is enough
     That life and death and joy and woe abide;
And cause and sequence, and the course of time,
     And Being's ceaseless tide,

Which, ever-changing, runs, linked like a river
     By ripples following ripples, fast or slow--
The same yet not the same--from far-off fountain
     To where its waters flow

Into the seas. These, steaming to the Sun,
     Give the lost wavelets back in cloudy fleece
To trickle down the hills, and glide again;
     Having no pause or peace.

This is enough to know, the phantasms are;
     The Heavens, Earths, Worlds, and changes changing them
A mighty whirling wheel of strife and stress
     Which none can stay or stem.

Pray not! the Darkness will not brighten!
     Ask Nought from the Silence, for it cannot speak!
Vex not your mournful minds with pious pains!
     Ah! Brothers, Sisters! seek

Nought from the helpless gods by gift and hymn,
     Nor bribe with blood, nor feed with fruit and cakes;
Within yourselves deliverance must be sought;
     Each man his prison makes.

Each hath such lordship as the loftiest ones;
      Nay, for with Powers above, around, below,
As with all flesh and whatsoever lives,
      Act maketh joy and woe.

What hath been bringeth what shall be, and is,
      Worse--better--last for first and first for last;
The Angels in the Heavens of Gladness reap
      Fruits of a holy past.

The devils in the underworlds wear out
     Deeds that were wicked in an age gone by.
Nothing endures: fair virtues waste with time,
     Foul sins grow purged thereby.

Who toiled a slave may come anew a Prince
     For gentle worthiness and merit won;
Who ruled a King may wander earth in rags
     For things done and undone.

Higher than Indra's ye may lift your lot,
     And sink it lower than the worm or gnat;
The end of many myriad lives is this,
     The end of myriads that.

Only, while turns this wheel invisible,
     No pause, no peace, no staying-place can be;
Who mounts will fall, who falls may mount; the spokes
     Go round unceasingly!


If ye lay bound upon the wheel of change,
     And no way were of breaking from the chain,
The Heart of boundless Being is a curse,
     The Soul of Things fell Pain.

Ye are not bound! the Soul of Things is sweet,
     The Heart of Being is celestial rest;
Stronger than woe is will: that which was Good
     Doth pass to Better--Best.

I, Buddh, who wept with all my brothers' tears,
     Whose heart was broken by a whole world's woe,
     Laugh and am glad, for there is Liberty
Ho! ye who suffer! know

Ye suffer from yourselves. None else compels
     None other holds you that ye live and die,
And whirl upon the wheel, and hug and kiss
     Its spokes of agony,

Its tire of tears, its nave of nothingness.
     Behold, I show you Truth! Lower than hell,
Higher than heaven, outside the utmost stars,
     Farther than Brahm doth dwell,

Before beginning, and without an end,
     As space eternal and as surety sure,
Is fixed a Power divine which moves to good,
     Only its laws endure.

This is its touch upon the blossomed rose,
     The fashion of its hand shaped lotus-leaves;
In dark soil and the silence of the seeds
     The robe of Spring it weaves;

That is its painting on the glorious clouds,
     And these its emeralds on the peacock's train;
It hath its stations in the stars;
     Its slaves in lightning, wind, and rain.

Out of the dark it wrought the heart of man,
     Out of dull shells the pheasant's pencilled neck;
Ever at toil, it brings to loveliness
     All ancient wrath and wreck.

The grey eggs in the golden sun-bird's nest
     Its treasures are, the bees' six-sided cell
Its honey-pot; the ant wots of its ways,
     The white doves know them well.

It spreadeth forth for flight the eagle's wings
     What time she beareth home her prey; it sends
The she-wolf to her cubs; for unloved things
   It findeth food and friends.

It is not marred nor stayed in any use,
     All liketh it; the sweet white milk it brings
To mothers' breasts; it brings the white drops, too,
     Wherewith the young snake stings.

The ordered music of the marching orbs
     It makes in viewless canopy of sky;
In deep abyss of earth it hides up gold,
     Sards, sapphires, lazuli.

Ever and ever bringing secrets forth,
     It sitteth in the green of forest-glades
Nursing strange seedlings at the cedar's root,
     Devising leaves, blooms, blades.

It slayeth and it saveth, nowise moved
     Except unto the working out of doom;
Its threads are Love and Life; and Death and Pain
     The shuttles of its loom.

It maketh and unmaketh, mending all;
     What it hath wrought is better than hath been;
Slow grows the splendid pattern that it plans
     Its wistful hands between.

This is its work upon the things ye see,
     The unseen things are more; men's hearts and minds,
The thoughts of peoples and their ways and wills,
     Those, too, the great Law binds.

Unseen it helpeth ye with faithful hands,
     Unheard it speaketh stronger than the storm.
Pity and Love are man's because long stress
     Moulded blind mass to form.

It will not be contemned of any one;
     Who thwarts it loses, and who serves it gains;
The hidden good it pays with peace and bliss,
     The hidden ill with pains.

It seeth everywhere and marketh all
     Do right--it recompenseth! do one wrong--
The equal retribution must be made,
     Though DHARMA tarry long.

It knows not wrath nor pardon; utter-true
     Its measures mete, its faultless balance weighs;
Times are as nought, tomorrow it will judge,
     Or after many days.

By this the slayer's knife did stab himself;
     The unjust judge hath lost his own defender;
The false tongue dooms its lie; the creeping thief
     And spoiler rob, to render.

Such is the Law which moves to righteousness,
     Which none at last can turn aside or stay;
The heart of it is Love, the end of it
     Is Peace and Consummation sweet. Obey!


The Books say well, my Brothers! each man's life
     The outcome of his former living is;
The bygone wrongs bring forth sorrows and woes
     The bygone right breeds bliss.

That which ye sow ye reap. See yonder fields
     The sesamum was sesamum, the corn
Was corn. The Silence and the Darkness knew!
     So is a man's fate born.

He cometh, reaper of the things he sowed,
     Sesamum, corn, so much cast in past birth;
And so much weed and poison-stuff, which mar
     Him and the aching earth.

If he shall labour rightly, rooting these,
     And planting wholesome seedlings where they grew,
Fruitful and fair and clean the ground shall be,
     And rich the harvest due.

If he who liveth, learning whence woe springs,
     Endureth patiently, striving to pay
His utmost debt for ancient evils done
     In Love and Truth alway;

If making none to lack, he throughly purge
     The lie and lust of self forth from his blood;
Suffering all meekly, rendering for offence
     Nothing but grace and good;

If he shall day by day dwell merciful,
     Holy and just and kind and true; and rend
Desire from where it clings with bleeding roots,
     Till love of life have end:

He--dying--leaveth as the sum of him
     A life-count closed, whose ills are dead and quit,
Whose good is quick and mighty, far and near,
     So that fruits follow it.

No need hath such to live as ye name life;
     That which began in him when he began
Is finished: he hath wrought the purpose through
     Of what did make him Man.

Never shall yearnings torture him, nor sins
     Stain him, nor ache of earthly joys and woes
Invade his safe eternal peace; nor deaths
     And lives recur. He goes

Unto NIRVANA! He is one with life
     Yet lives not. He is blest, ceasing to be.
OM, MANI PADME, OM! the Dewdrop slips
     Into the shining sea!


This is the doctrine of the KARMA. Learn!
     Only when all the dross of sin is quit,
Only when life dies like a white flame spent
     Death dies along with it.

Say not "I am," "I was," or "I shall be,"
     Think not ye pass from house to house of flesh
Like travelers who remember and forget,
     Ill-lodged or well-lodged. Fresh

Issues upon the Universe that sum
     Which is the lattermost of lives.
It makes Its habitation as the worm spins silk
     And dwells therein. It takes

Function and substance as the snake's egg hatched
     Takes scale and fang; as feathered reedseeds fly
O'er rock and loam and sand, until they find
     Their marsh and multiply.

Also it issues forth to help or hurt.
     When Death the bitter murderer doth smite,
Red roams the unpurged fragment of him, driven
     On wings of plague and blight.

But when the mild and just die, sweet airs breathe;
     The world grows richer, as if desert-stream
Should sink away to sparkle up again
     Purer, with broader gleam.

So merit won winneth the happier age
     Which by demerit halteth short of end;
Yet must this Law of Love reign King of all
     Before the Kalpas end.

What lets?--Brothers? the Darkness lets! which breeds
     Ignorance, mazed whereby ye take these shows
For true, and thirst to have, and, having, cling
     To lusts which work you woes.

Ye that will tread the Middle Road, whose course
     Bright Reason traces and soft
Quiet smoothes; Ye who will take the high Nirvana-way,
     List the Four Noble Truths.

The First Truth is of Sorrow. Be not mocked!
     Life which ye prize is long-drawn agony:
Only its pains abide; its pleasures are
     As birds which light and fly,

Ache of the birth, ache of the helpless days,
     Ache of hot youth and ache of manhood's prime;
Ache of the chill grey years and choking death,
     These fill your piteous time.

Sweet is fond Love, but funeral-flames must kiss
     The breasts which pillow and the lips which cling;
Gallant is warlike Might, but vultures pick
     The joints of chief and King.

Beauteous is Earth, but all its forest-broods
     Plot mutual slaughter, hungering to live;
Of sapphire are the skies, but when men cry
     Famished, no drops they give.

Ask of the sick, the mourners, ask of him
     Who tottereth on his staff, lone and forlorn,
"Liketh thee life?"--these say the babe is wise
     That weepeth, being born.

The Second Truth is Sorrow's Cause. What grief
     Springs of itself and springs not of Desire?
Senses and things perceived mingle and light
     Passion's quick spark of fire:

So flameth Trishna, lust and thirst of things.
     Eager ye cleave to shadows, dote on dreams.
A false Self in the midst ye plant, and make
     A world around which seems;

Blind to the height beyond, deaf to the sound
     Of sweet airs breathed from far past Indra's sky;
Dumb to the summons of the true life kept
     For him who false puts by.

So grow the strifes and lusts which make earth's war,
     So grieve poor cheated hearts and flow salt tears;
So wag the passions, envies, angers, hates;
     So years chase blood-stained years

With wild red feet. So, where the grain should grow,
     Spreads the biran-weed with its evil root
And poisonous blossoms; hardly good seeds find
     Soil where to fall and shoot;

And drugged with poisonous drink the soul departs,
     And fierce with thirst to drink Karma returns;
Sense-struck again the sodden self begins,
     And new deceits it earns

The Third is Sorrow's Ceasing. This is peace--
     To conquer love of self and lust of life,
To tear deep-rooted passion from the breast,
     To still the inward strife;

For love, to clasp Eternal Beauty close;
     For glory, to be lord of self; for pleasure,
To live beyond the gods; for countless wealth,
     To lay up lasting treasure

Of perfect service rendered, duties done
     In charity, soft speech, and stainless days
These riches shall not fade away in life,
     Nor any death dispraise.

Then Sorrow ends, for Life and Death have ceased;
     How should lamps flicker when their oil is spent?
The old sad count is clear, the new is clean;
     Thus hath a man content.


The Fourth Truth is The Way. It openeth wide,
     Plain for all feet to tread, easy and near,
The Noble Eightfold Path; it goeth straight
     To peace and refuge. Hear!

Manifold tracks lead to yon sister-peaks
     Around whose snows the gilded clouds are curled
By steep or gentle slopes the climber comes
     Where breaks that other world.

Strong limbs may dare the rugged road which storms,
     Soaring and perilous, the mountain's breast;
The weak must wind from slower ledge to ledge
     With many a place of rest.

So is the Eightfold Path which brings to peace;
     By lower or by upper heights it goes.
The firm soul hastes, the feeble tarries. All
     Will reach the sunlit snows.

The First good Level is Right Doctrine.
     Walk In fear of Dharma, shunning all offence;
In heed of Karma, which doth make man's fate;
     In lordship over sense.

The Second is Right Purpose. Have good-will
     To all that lives, letting unkindness die
And greed and wrath; so that your lives be made
     Like soft airs passing by.

The Third is Right Discourse. Govern the lips
     As they were palace-doors, the King within;
Tranquil and fair and courteous be all words
     Which from that presence win.

The Fourth is Right Behavior. Let each act
     Assoil a fault or help a merit grow;
Like threads of silver seen through crystal beads
     Let love through good deeds show.

Four higher roadways be. Only those feet
     May tread them which have done with earthly things--
Right Purity, Right Thought, Right Loneliness,
     Right Rapture. Spread no wings

For sunward flight, thou soul with unplumed vans
     Sweet is the lower air and safe, and known
The homely levels: only strong ones leave
     The nest each makes his own.

Dear is the love, I know, of Wife and Child;
     Pleasant the friends and pastimes of your years;
Fruitful of good Life's gentle charities;
     False, though firm-set, its fears.

Live--ye who must--such lives as live on these;
     Make golden stair-ways of your weakness; rise
By daily sojourn with those phantasies
     To lovelier verities.

So shall ye pass to clearer heights and find
     Easier ascents and lighter loads of sins,
And larger will to burst the bonds of sense,
     Entering the Path. Who wins

To such commencement hath the First Stage touched;
     He knows the Noble Truths, the Eightfold Road;
By few or many steps such shall attain
     NIRVANA's blest abode.

Who standeth at the Second Stage, made free
     From doubts, delusions, and the inward strife,
Lord of all lusts, quit of the priests and books,
     Shall live but one more life.

Yet onward lies the Third Stage: purged and pure
     Hath grown the stately spirit here, hath risen
To love all living things in perfect peace.
      His life at end, life's prison

Is broken. Nay, there are who surely pass
     Living and visible to utmost goal
By Fourth Stage of the Holy ones--the Buddhs--
     And they of stainless soul.

Lo! like fierce foes slain by some warrior,
     Ten sins along these Stages lie in dust,
The Love of Self, False Faith, and Doubt are three,
     Two more, Hatred and Lust.

Who of these Five is conqueror hath trod
     Three stages out of Four: yet there abide
The Love of Life on earth, Desire for Heaven,
     Self-Praise, Error, and Pride.

As one who stands on yonder snowy horn
     Having nought o'er him but the boundless blue,
So, these sins being slain, the man is come
     NIRVANA's verge unto.

Him the Gods envy from their lower seats;
     Him the Three Worlds in ruin should not shake;
All life is lived for him, all deaths are dead;
     Karma will no more make

New houses. Seeking nothing, he gains all;
     Foregoing self, the Universe grows "I":
If any teach NIRVANA is to cease,
     Say unto such they lie.

If any teach NIRVANA is to live,
     Say unto such they err; not knowing this,
Nor what light shines beyond their broken lamps,
     Nor lifeless, timeless bliss.

Enter the Path! There is no grief like Hate!
     No pains like passions, no deceit like sense!
Enter the Path! far hath he gone whose foot
     Treads down one fond offence.

Enter the Path! There spring the healing streams
     Quenching all thirst! there bloom th' immortal flowers
Carpeting all the way with joy! there throng,
     Swiftest and sweetest hours!


More is the treasure of the Law than gems;
     Sweeter than comb its sweetness; its delights
Delightful past compare. Thereby to live
     Hear the Five Rules aright:--

Kill not--for Pity's sake--and lest ye slay
The meanest thing upon its upward way.

Give freely and receive, but take from none
By greed, or force, or fraud, what is his own.

Bear not false witness, slander not, nor lie;
Truth is the speech of inward purity.

Shun drugs and drinks which work the wit abuse;
Clear minds, clean bodies, need no soma juice.

Touch not thy neighbour's wife, neither commit
Sins of the flesh unlawful and unfit.

These words the Master spake of duties due
To father, mother, children, fellows, friends;
Teaching how such as may not swiftly break
The clinging chains of sense--whose feet are weak
To tread the higher road--should order so
This life of flesh that all their hither days
Pass blameless in discharge of charities
And first true footfalls in the Eightfold Path;
Living pure, reverent, patient, pitiful,
Loving all things which live even as themselves;
Because what falls for ill is fruit of ill
Wrought in the past, and what falls well of good;
And that by howsomuch the householder
Purgeth himself of self and helps the world,
By so much happier comes he to next stage,
In so much bettered being. This he spake,
As also long before, when our Lord walked
By Rajagriha in the Bamboo-Grove
For on a dawn he walked there and beheld
The householder Singala, newly bathed,
Bowing himself with bare head to the earth,
To Heaven, and all four quarters; while he threw
Rice, red and white, from both hands. "Wherefore thus
Bowest thou, Brother?" said the Lord; and he,
"It is the way, Great Sir! our fathers taught
At every dawn, before the toil begins,
To hold off evil from the sky above
And earth beneath, and all the winds which blow."
Then the World-honoured spake: "Scatter not rice,
But offer loving thoughts and acts to all.
To parents as the East where rises light;
To teachers as the South whence rich gifts come;
To wife and children as the West where gleam
Colours of love and calm, and all days end;
To friends and kinsmen and all men as North;
To humblest living things beneath, to Saints
And Angels and the blessed Dead above
So shall all evil be shut off, and so
The six main quarters will be safely kept."

But to his own, them of the yellow robe
They who, as wakened eagles, soar with scorn
From life's low vale, and wing towards the Sun
To these he taught the Ten Observances
The Dasa-Sil, and how a mendicant
Must know the Three Doors and the Triple Thoughts;
The Sixfold States of Mind; the Fivefold Powers;
The Eight High Gates of Purity; the Modes
Of Understanding; Iddhi; Upeksha;
The Five Great Meditations, which are food
Sweeter than Amrit for the holy soul;
The Jhana's and the Three Chief Refuges.
Also he taught his own how they should dwell;
How live, free from the snares of love and wealth;
What eat and drink and carry--three plain cloths,
Yellow, of stitched stuff, worn with shoulder bare
A girdle, almsbowl, strainer. Thus he laid
The great foundations of our Sangha well,
That noble Order of the Yellow Robe
Which to this day standeth to help the World.

     So all that night he spake, teaching the Law
And on no eyes fell sleep--for they who heard
Rejoiced with tireless joy. Also the King,
When this was finished, rose upon his throne
And with bared feet bowed low before his Son
Kissing his hem; and said, "Take me, O Son!
Lowest and least of all thy Company."
And sweet Yasodhara, all happy now,--
Cried "Give to Rahula--thou Blessed One!
The Treasure of the Kingdom of thy Word
For his inheritance." Thus passed these Three
Into the Path.



Here endeth what I write
Who love the Master for his love of us,
A little knowing, little have I told
Touching the Teacher and the Ways of Peace.
Forty-five rains thereafter showed he those
In many lands and many tongues and gave
Our Asia light, that still is beautiful,
Conquering the world with spirit of strong grace
All which is written in the holy Books,
And where he passed and what proud Emperors
Carved his sweet words upon the rocks and caves:
And how--in fulness of the times--it fell
The Buddha died, the great Tathagato,
Even as a man 'mongst men, fulfilling all
And how a thousand thousand crores since then
Have trod the Path which leads whither he went
Unto NIRVANA where the Silence lives.

     Ah! Blessed Lord! Oh, High Deliverer!
Forgive this feeble script, which doth thee wrong.
Measuring with little wit thy lofty love.
Ah! Lover! Brother! Guide! Lamp of the law!
I take my refuge in they name and thee!
I take my refuge in they order! OM!
The dew is on the lotus!--Rise, Great Sun!
And lift my leaf and mix me with the wave.
Om Mani Padme Hum, the sunrise comes!
The Dewdrop Slips Into The Shining Sea!


The End