So it was heard by me:
At one time Bhagavat dwelt at Sâvatthî, in /G/etavana, in the park of
Anâthapi/nd/ika. Then the Bhikkhu Kokâliya approached Bhagavat, and
after having approached and saluted Bhagavat he sat down apart; sitting
down apart the Bhikkhu Kokâliya said this to Bhagavat: "O thou venerable
one, Sâriputta and Moggallâna have evil desires, they have fallen into
the power of evil desires.'
When this had been said, Bhagavat spoke to the Bhikkhu Kokâliya as
follows: '(Do) not (say) so, Kokâliya; (do) not (say) so, Kokâliya;
appease, O Kokâliya, (thy) mind in regard to Sâriputta and Moggallâna:
Sâriputta and Moggallâna are amiable.'
A second time the Bhikkhu Kokâliya said this to Bhagavat: 'Although
thou, O venerable Bhagavat, (appearest) to me (to be) faithful and
trustworthy, yet Sâriputta and Moggallâna have evil desires, they have
fallen into the power of evil desires.'
A second time Bhagavat said this to the Bhikkhu Kokâliya: '(Do) not
(say) so, Kokâliya; (do) not (say) so, Kokâliya; appease, O Kokâliya,
(thy) mind in regard to Sâriputta and Moggallâna: Sâriputta and
Moggallâna are amiable.'
A third time the Bhikkhu Kokâliya said this to Bhagavat: 'Although
thou, O venerable Bhagavat, (appearest) to me (to be) faithful and
trustworthy,
yet Sâriputta and Moggallâna have evil desires, Sâriputta and Moggallâna
have fallen into the power of evil desires.'
A third time Bhagavat said this to the Bhikkhu Kokâliya: '(Do) not
(say) so, Kokâliya; (do) not (say) so, Kokâliya; appease, O Kokâliya,
(thy) mind in regard to Sâriputta and Moggallâna: Sâriputta and
Moggallâna are amiable.'
Then the Bhikkhu Kokâliya, after having risen from his seat and
saluted Bhagavat and walked round him towards the right, went away; and
when he had been gone a short time, all his body was struck with boils
as large as mustard seeds; after being only as large as mustard seeds,
they became as large as kidney beans; after being only as large as
kidney beans, they became as large as chick peas; after being only as
large as chick peas, they became as large as a Kola/tth/i egg (?); after
being only as large as a Kola/tth/i egg, they became as large as the
jujube fruit; after being only as large as the jujube fruit, they became
as large as the fruit of the emblic myrobalan; after being only as large
as the fruit of the emblic myrobalan, they became as large as the unripe
beluva fruit; after being only as large as the unripe beluva fruit, they
became as large as a billi fruit (?); after being as large as a billi
fruit, they broke, and matter and blood flowed out. Then the Bhikkhu
Kokâliya died of that disease, and when he had died the Bhikkhu Kokâliya
went to the Paduma hell, having shown a hostile mind against Sâriputta
and Moggallâna. Then when the night had passed Brahman Sahampati of a
beautiful appearance, having lit up all /G/etavana, approached Bhagavat,
and having approached and saluted Bhagavat,
he stood apart, and standing apart Brahman Sahampati said this to
Bhagavat: 'O thou venerable one, Kokâliya, the Bhikkhu, is dead and
after death, O thou venerable one, the Bhikkhu Kokâliya is gone to the
Paduma hell, having shown a hostile mind against Sâriputta and Moggallâna.'
This said Brahman Sahampati, and after saying this and saluting
Bhagavat, and walking round him towards the right, he disappeared there.
Then Bhagavat, after the expiration of that night, addressed the
Bhikkhus thus: 'Last night, O Bhikkhus, when the night had (nearly)
passed, Brahman Sahampati of a beautiful appearance, having lit up all
/G/etavana, approached Bhagavat, and having approached and saluted
Bhagavat, he stood apart, and standing apart Brahman Sahampati said this
to Bhagavat: "O thou venerable one, Kokâliya, the Bhikkhu, is dead; and
after death, O thou venerable one, the Bhikkhu Kokâliya is gone to the
Paduma hell, having shown a hostile mind against Sâriputta and
Moggallâna." This said Brahman Sahampati, O Bhikkhus, and having said
this and saluted me, and walked round me towards the right, he
disappeared there.'
When this had been said, a Bhikkhu asked Bhagavat: 'How long is the
rate of life, O venerable one, in the Paduma hell?'
'Long, O Bhikkhu, is the rate of life in the Paduma hell, it is not
easy to calculate either (by saying) so many years or so many hundreds
of years or so many thousands of years or so many hundred thousands of
years.'
'But it is possible, I suppose, to make a comparison, O thou
venerable one?'
'It is possible, O Bhikkhu;' so saying, Bhagavat spoke (as follows):
'Even as, O Bhikkhu, (if there were) a Kosala load of sesamum seed
containing twenty khâris, and a man after the lapse of every hundred
years were to take from it one sesamum seed at a time, then that Kosala
load of sesamum seed, containing twenty khâris, would, O Bhikkhu, sooner
by this means dwindle away and be used up than one Abbuda hell; and even
as are twenty Abbuda hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one Nirabbuda hell; and
even as are twenty Nirabbuda hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one Ababa hell; and
even as are twenty Ababa hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one Ahaha hell; and
even as are twenty Ahaha hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one A/t/a/t/a hell; and
even as are twenty A/t/a/t/a hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one Kumuda hell;
and even as are twenty Kumuda hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one Sogandhika
hell; and even as are twenty Sogandhika hells, O Bhikkhu, so is one
Uppalaka hell; and even as are twenty Uppalaka hells, O Bhikkhu, so is
one Pu/nd/arîka hell; and even as are twenty Pu/nd/arîka hells, O
Bhikkhu, so is one Paduma hell; and to the Paduma hell, O Bhikkhu, the
Bhikkhu Kokâliya is gone, having shown a hostile mind against Sâriputta
and Moggallâna.' This said Bhagavat, and having said this Sugata, the
Master, furthermore spoke as follows:
1.
'To (every) man that is born, an axe is born in his mouth, by
which the fool cuts himself, when speaking bad language.
2.
'He who praises him who is to be blamed or blames him who as to be
praised, gathers up sin in his mouth, and through that (sin) he will not
find any joy.
3.
'Trifling is the sin that (consists in) losing riches by dice;
this is a greater sin that corrupts the mind against Sugatas.
4.
'Out of the one hundred thousand Nirabbudas (he goes) to
thirty-six, and to five Abbudas; because he blames an Ariya he goes to
hell, having employed his speech and mind badly.
5.
'He who speaks falsely goes to hell, or he who having done
something says, "I have not done it;" both these after death become
equal, in another world (they are both) men guilty of a mean deed.
6.
'He who offends an offenceless man, a pure man, free from sin,
such a fool the evil (deed) reverts against, like fine dust thrown
against the wind.
7.
'He who is given to the quality of covetousness, such a one
censures others in his speech, (being himself) unbelieving, stingy,
wanting in affability, niggardly, given to backbiting.
8.
'O thou foul-mouthed, false, ignoble, blasting, wicked,
evil-doing, low, sinful, base-born man, do not be garrulous in this
world, (else) thou wilt be an inhabitant of hell.
9.
'Thou spreadest pollution to the misfortune (of others), thou
revilest the just, committing sin (yourself), and having done many evil
deeds thou wilt go to the pool (of hell) for a long time.
10.
'For one's deeds are not lost, they will surely come (back to
you), (their) master will meet with them, the fool who commits sin will
feel the pain in himself in the other world.
11.
'To the place where one is struck with iron rods, to the iron
stake with sharp edges he goes; then there is (for him) food as
appropriate, resembling a red-hot ball of iron.
12.
'For those who have anything to say (there) do not say fine
things, they do not approach (with pleasing faces); they do not find
refuge (from their sufferings), they lie on spread embers, they enter a
blazing pyre.
13.
'Covering (them) with a net they kill (them) there with iron
hammers; they go to dense darkness, for that is spread out like the
body of the earth.
14.
'Then (they enter) an iron pot, they enter a blazing pyre, for
they are boiled in those (iron pots) for a long time, jumping up and
down in the pyre.
15.
'Then he who commits sin is surely boiled in a mixture of matter
and blood; whatever quarter he inhabits, he becomes rotten there from
coming in contact (with matter and blood).
16.
'He who commits sin will surely be boiled in the water, the
dwelling-place of worms; there it is not (possible) to get to the shore,
for the jars (are) exactly alike. (?)
17.
'Again they enter the sharp Asipattavana with mangled limbs;
having seized the tongue with a hook, the different watchmen (of hell)
kill (them).
18.
'Then they enter Vetara/n/î, that is difficult to cross and has
got streams of razors with sharp edges; there the fools fall in, the
evil-doers after having done evil.
19.
'There black, mottled flocks of ravens eat them who are weeping,
and dogs, jackals, great vultures, falcons, crows tear (them).
20.
'Miserable indeed is the life here (in hell) which the man sees
that commits sin. Therefore should a man in this world for the rest of
his life be strenuous, and not indolent.
21.
'Those loads of sesamum seed which are carried in Paduma hell
have been counted by the wise, they are (several) nahutas and five
ko/t/is, and twelve hundred ko/t/is besides.
22.
'As long as hells are called painful in this world, so long
people will have to live there for a long time; therefore amongst those
who have pure, amiable, and good qualities one should always guard
speech and mind.'