Page:Asoka - the Buddhist Emperor of India.djvu/254

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252
ASOKA

guardian Nâgas, who would not allow it to be opened. The relics thus withdrawn from the Stûpa of the Urn were distributed among eighty-four thousand stûpas, 'resplendent as the autumn clouds,' which were erected in a single day by the descendant of the Mauryas. 'The worshipful, the fortunate Maurya caused the erection of all these stûpas for the benefit of created beings; formerly he was called on earth Asoka the Wicked, but this good work has earned for him the name of Asoka the Pious [1].'

The metrical Avadâna is still more extravagant than the prose form of the tale, and alleges that 3,510 millions of stûpas were erected at the request of the people of Taxila, and that ten millions were erected by the Yakshas on the shores of the sea.

THE PILGRIMAGE OF ASOKA

Having erected the eighty-four thousand stûpas, King Asoka expressed a desire to visit the holy places of his religion. By the advice of his counsellors he sent for the saint Upagupta, son of Gupta the perfumer. Upagupta had been in accordance with prophecy born a century after the death of Buddha, and, when summoned by the king, was dwelling on Mount Urumunda in the Natabhatika forest near Mathurâ.

The saint accepted the royal invitation, and, accom-

  1. This passage proves that the hero of the Asokâvadâna is Asoka Maurya.