QUEEN
SAMAVATI and her ladies-in-waiting all wanted to go and pay homage to the
Buddha but feared that the king would not approve. So they made holes in the
walls of their living quarters from which they could see the Buddha as he
passed by the palace and bow their heads in reverence to him.
Another consort in the king's harem, however, was of a different
mind. She despised the Buddha. She had never forgotten how her father had once
offered her hand in marriage to him and how he had flatly refused. She had felt
so humiliated that she vowed to make him pay dearly for it one day.
Her chance had finally come, she thought, upon discovering what
the queen and her maids were up to. She went and lied to the king saying that
the Buddha was secretly seeing Queen Samavati behind his back. She then took
the king to see the holes in the walls for himself. But when the king asked his
queen to account for them, he remained satisfied with her reply and let the
matter drop.
The consort then decided that if she would not be able to take
out her revenge on the Buddha himself, she would take it out on his admirers.
This she did by trying to make the king believe that Queen Samavati and her
maids were plotting to kill him. She first warned the king to beware of the
ladies' treachery, and then went and hid a snake in his lute. When the king
picked it up to play, the snake came out hissing at him, ready to strike. It
took little else to convince the king that his consort was indeed telling him
the truth.
He went to Queen Samavati's chambers and commanded her and her
maids to stand up all in a row. He then shot poisoned arrows at them. No matter
how hard he tried, however, he missed them all, for the arrows seemed to veer
away from their intended targets all by themselves. This proved to the king
that the ladies were all pure and innocent, and to show remorse for his
mistake, he allowed the ladies to invite the Buddha and his monks to the palace
for a meal.
The wicked consort, in the meantime, was beside herself with
frustration and rage, but she was not about ready to give up. Next, she devised
what she considered to be a foolproof plan. She asked an uncle to set fire to
Samavati's quarters while the women were all inside. As the building went up in
flames, however, the queen and her attendants did not flinch. They continued to
mindfully meditate and succeeded in reaching the higher levels of spiritual
attainment before they finally died.
The king at once suspected that his consort was the one behind
the disaster and wanted to prove it. He said in a voice loud enough for
everyone to hear, "Whoever has done this is my savior and should be richly
rewarded. Up to now I have lived in the fear of being murdered by my own wife,
but now I am free and can sleep in peace."
The foolish consort immediately revealed her and her uncle's
part in the horrendous crime, anxious for the king's favors. The king feigned
delight at her confession and asked her to invite her entire family to the
palace where they would be honored. Once assembled, however, they were all put
to death.
When it was reported to the Buddha how the queen and her
attendants had died, he told them that those who were mindful did not die. It
was those not mindful who, even though still alive, were as good as dead.
Morale of The Story
"Mindfulness is the way to the Deathless (Nibbana),
unmindfulness the way to Death. Those who are mindful do not die, and those who
are not are as if already dead."
{Verse 21}
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