• Therāpadāna
  • The Legends of the Theras
  • Ekapadumiya Chapter, the Thirty-Fifth

338. {341.} Ekapadumiya

The Victor Padumuttara
was the Master of Everything.
Explaining all existences,
he ferried many folks across.

At that time I was a swan-king;
I was distinguished among birds.
Plunged into a natural lake,
I am sporting the sports of swans.

Padumuttara, World-Knower,
Sacrificial Recipient,
the Victor would fly, all the time,
over that natural lake there.

I having seen the God of Gods,
the Self-Become One, World-Leader,
gathered lotuses with my beak—
lovely, with a hundred petals—
and having broken off the stems,
tossing them into the sky, I
did pūjā to the Best Buddha,
pleased by the Leader of the World.

Padumuttara, World-Knower,
Sacrificial Recipient,
the Teacher, standing in the sky,
gave me this expression of thanks:

ā€œDue to this single lotus gift,
with intention and firm resolve,
for one hundred thousand aeons
you won’t fall into suffering.ā€

Having said this the Sambuddha
whose name was Ultimate Lotus,
after detailing my karma,
went according to his wishes.

In the hundred thousand aeons
since I did that good karma then,
I’ve come to know no bad rebirth:
that’s the fruit of Buddha-pÅ«jā.

The four analytical modes,
and these eight deliverances,
six special knowledges mastered,
I have done what the Buddha taught!

Thus indeed Venerable Ekapadumiya Thera spoke these verses.