II. BUDDHISM_LECTURES ON THE HARVARD CLASSICS

II. BUDDHISM

BY PROFESSOR C. R. LANMAN

THE LIFE of Gotama, the Enlightened One, or Buddha, a life of eighty years, is divided into two parts, one of thirty-five years and one of forty-five, by the event of his Enlightenment or Bodhi. This seeing of a new light is to a Buddhist the one supreme event of the incalculably long æon now current, just as is the birth of Jesus in Occidental chronology. Those first thirty-five years are again divided into two parts, the period of his life as a prince or the time from his birth until (at the age of twenty-nine〖Harvard Classics, xlv, 643.〗) he forsook the world to struggle for the Supreme Enlightenment, and the period of the six years of that struggle. Of these thirty-five years we have elaborate accounts.〖H. C., xlv, 603–646.〗 Of the last forty-five, tradition has little to say in the way of entertaining story, but very much by way of reporting “the Teacher’s” teachings. These teachings as laid down in the canonical scriptures of Buddhism are in very deed his life in the truest sense.

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