Where summer is the fittest time for toil,
When India’s rains force India’s sons to rest.
The new vihara and the bamboo-grove
King Bimbasara to the master gave,
Where day by day he taught his growing school,
While rills, grown torrents, leap from rock to rock,
And Phalgu’s swollen stream sweeps down the vale.
That Saraputra after called the Great
Had seen these new-come youths in yellow
robes
Passing from street to street to ask for
alms,
Receiving coarsest food with gentle thanks—
Had seen them meet the poor and sick and
old
With kindly words and ever-helpful hands—
Had seen them passing to the bamboo-grove
Joyful as bridegrooms soon to meet their
brides.
He, Vashpa and Asvajit met one day,
Whom he had known beneath the banyan-tree,
Two of the five who first received the
law,
Now clothed in yellow, bearing begging-bowls,
And asked their doctrine, who their master
was,
That they seemed joyful, while within
the grove
All seemed so solemn, self-absorbed and
sad.
They bade him come and hear the master’s
words,
And when their bowls were filled, he followed
them,
And heard the living truth from Buddha’s
lips,
And said: “The sun of wisdom
has arisen.
What further need of our poor flickering
lamps?”
And with Mugallan joined the master’s
band.
And now five strangers from the Tartar
steppes,
Strangers in form and features, language,
dress,
Guided by one as strange in dress as they,
Weary and foot-sore, passed within the
gates
Of Rajagriha, while the rising sun
Was still concealed behind the vulture-peak,
A laughing-stock to all the idle crowd,
Whom noisy children followed through the
streets
As thoughtless children follow what is
strange,
Until they met the master asking alms,
Who with raised hand and gentle, mild
rebuke
Hushed into silence all their noisy mirth.
“These are our brothers,”
Buddha mildly said.
“Weary and worn they come from distant
lands,
And ask for kindness—not for
mirth and jeers.”
They knew at once that calm, majestic
face,
That voice as sweet as Brahma’s,
and those eyes
Beaming with tender, all-embracing love,
Of which, while seated round their argol
fires
In their black tents, brave Purna loved
to tell,
And bowed in worship at the master’s
feet.
He bade them rise, and learned from whence
they came,
And led them joyful to the bamboo-grove,
Where some brought water from the nearest
stream
To bathe their festered feet and weary
limbs,
While some brought food and others yellow
robes—
Fitter for India’s heat than skins
and furs—
All welcoming their new-found friends
who came
From distant lands, o’er desert
wastes and snows,
To see the master, hear the perfect law,
And bring the message noble Purna sent.