Page:Sacred Books of the East - Volume 21.djvu/322

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274
SADDHARMA-PUNDARÎKA.
xiii.

unmolested, honoured, respected, esteemed, venerated by monks, nuns, and lay devotees, male and female, by kings, princes, ministers, king's officers, by citizens and country people, by Brahmans and laymen; the gods of the sky will, full of faith, follow his track to hear the law, and the angels will follow his track to protect him; whether he is in a village or in a monastery, they will approach him day and night to put questions about the law, and they will be satisfied, charmed with his explanation. For this Dharmaparyiya, Ma^fufft, has been blessed by all Buddhas. With the past, future, and present Tathigata, Maurri, this Dharmaparyiya is for ever blessed. Precious[1] in all worlds, Maguni, is the sound, rumour, or mentioning of this Dharmaparyiya.

It is a case, Maaguni, similar to that of a king, a ruler of armies, who by force has conquered his own kingdom, whereupon other kings, his adversaries, wage war against him. That ruler of armies has soldiers of various description to fight with various enemies. As the king sees those soldiers fighting, he is delighted with their gallantry, enraptured, and in his delight and rapture he makes to his soldiers several donations, such as villages and village grounds, towns and grounds of a town; garments and head-gear; hand-ornaments,

necklaces, gold threads, earrings, strings of pearls, bullion, gold, gems, pearls, lapis lazuli, conch-shells, stones (?), corals; he, moreover, gives elephants, horses, cars, foot soldiers, male and female slaves, vehicles, and litters. But to none he makes a present


  1. Durlabha, also meaning rare, difficult to be got.