p. 455 The fact assertted in Mr. H. Fielding Hall's People at School (1906) that, although in the old days "it was immoral to take life, wicked to eat meat and connive at butchery," it is now the custom for Burmese Buddhists to do as they like in regard to eating ("Every one eats meat, even the monks, " p.257), is explained by the author as a new departure, due to the stimulating effect of the presence in Burma of the British beef eater. Is it not, in reality, a reversal in favor of a rule of greater freedom? Perhaps it is true that the Burman has but lately found out for himself that the "religion of Necessity" is better than the religion of Buddha as hitherto understood, for a progressive Burman may have to eat well to compete with British energy; but it is matter of interest to inquire just how strict in ancient times was the law against eating meat. The great Protestant of India was no formalist. According to the Vinaya, which seems rather to reflect the Master's attitude than really to give his words as it pretends to do, Buddha was perpetually harassed by imbecile friars, whose childish questions he always answered in a spirit of liberality and common sense. Even later works show that to observe the spirit and not the letter was the Buddhistic ideal. What is said of verse may be applied to law, attham hi natho saranam avoca na bhyanjanam lokavidu mahesi, "The all-wise Lord declared that salvation lies in the spirit and not in the letter" (Comm. Khuddaka Patha, v). Thus, for example, the general rule against suicide emanated from the view that a saint ought to remain on earth as a good example; yet, in special circumstances, Buddha is represented as approving of suicide, as in the case of the Elder Godhika. Here it is only the Evil One who objects to the act, on the ground that to cut one's own throat argues a perfected saint (one indifferent p. 456 to life), and that it is undesirable for the Evil One thus to lose possession of the good Elder.(1) So also the early Church, in the case of killing and eating, appears to have been less strict than the later. The later Brahmanic law, like that of the Jains, was very particular in regard to these points. Except for sacrifice, to kill no sentient thing and to eat no meat were absolute priestly laws. Even starvation was barely an excuse for breaking these regulations, though the class that did as it pleased despite the priests was reluctantly conceded the right to hunt wild animals, and the priest even found mythological reasons which made it meritorious for a 'king's man' to kill deer as well as men. People outside the pale of respectability, fishers, fowlers, tanners, etc., were also contemptuously permitted to remain in their odor of non-sanctity. But for a priest even necessary agriculture was deprecated, 'because the plough hurts living things.' That this 'non-injury' rule was Buddhistic in origin is contrary to the evidence. Even the oldest Brahmanic law, which is at least as venerable as any Buddhistic literature, inculcates the general moral rule of doing as one would be done by in the matter of injuring, killing, and eating one's brother-animal. Nevertheless, there are traces of a condition of things much freer than this in the Brahmanic circle of a still earlier day. In Ait. Br. iv. 3, man is said to eat, as well as rule over, cattle: purusah pasusu pratisthito 'tti cai'nan adhi ca tisthati (on pasu as implying cattle, cf. vi. 20). It is a Brahman priest who says that he eats beef if it is off the shoulder(? amsalam, Sat. Br. iii. 1. 2. 21). The common people are said at the same period to be omophagous, amad (Kanva text, ib. iv. 5. 2. 16), and the king has at least no scruples in regard to wearing leather sandals, varahya upanaha, ib. v. 4. 3. 19. Leather fastenings are also alluded to in Ait. Br. v. 32. Brahman butchers are well known, even in the Buddhistic period.(2) The formal law-books permit the eating of many animals, birds, and fishes, although they denounce the sin of eating meat (see particularly Gautama, ---------------------- 1. For the rule, see the Patimokkha and Rhys-Davids on the Questions of Milinda; for the case of Godhika, Warren. HOS 3, p. 381. 2. Compare Jataka No.495 (Fick, Sec. Glied, p.141). Compare also the casual allusion to a butcher-shop in Jat. No.330. In Jat. No. 423 a Brahman lives by hunting deer. p. 457 xvii, Baudh. xii, and Manu v). But perhaps casual allusions reveal more than do the law-books. Convincing, for example, is Tandya Br. xvii. 13. 9: "Clothed in a fresh garment he comes up from the initiation-bath and during four months neither eats meat nor has intercourse with a woman." That is as much as to say, when not in a state of special purity one is expected to eat meat. Compare Sat. Br. x. 1. 4. 13. Similarly, although the Buddhist accepts and further promulgates, in his own decrepit dialect, the law "not to kill and not to cause killing," it is evident that the law, if not late, was at first not taken very strictly. Possibly, just as the Brahmanic classes ('castes') were recognized, but without the Brahmanic rigidity, which did not usually distinguish between letter and spirit, so Brahmanic morality was, as an inheritance, not disregarded; but at the same time it was not so narrowly interpreted. Among the many things which, according to the Buddhists' scriptures, "people" (that is, non-Buddhistic people) objected to in the conduct of the Buddhists was disregard of the life of sentient beings. According to the same indisputable testimony, people once found a Buddhist friar killing --of all animals --a calf, and several times they complained that "followers of the Buddha" hurt and killed living things. Even as an artistic background to the introduction of stricter rules, these tales, preserved in the Buddhists' own books, can scarcely be supposed to be made of whole cloth. There was some reason for the tale and for the introduction of the more stringent rule. And the reason was probably that, while Buddha really endorsed the rule Na hanaye na ghataye, "Let one kill not, nor cause killing," neither he nor the early Buddhists interpreted it so stirictly as the Brahman was inclined to do. It is very seldom, for example, that we find the addition "nor approve of others killing" (Dhammika Sutta). To the Buddhist of the early days, meat was not forbidden, though it was a work of supererogation to abstain from it. Meat was a delicacy and it was not proper for an abstemious friar to indulge in any delicacies. On the other hand, to take a vow not to eat meat was unusual; it was distinctly an extra effort in 'acquiring merit.'(1) The house-holder is ---------------------- 1. The Patimokkha prohibits meat and fish merely on the ground that they are delicacies. The rules for novices contain no injunction against eating meat. On the early usage among the friars, see Professor Rhys-Davids' Buddhism, p.164. p. 458 distinguished from the ascetic in this, that the latter has no wife and does not destroy life, while the former has a wife and does destroy life (Muni Sutta). The rule of the 'King of Glory' is not a narrow one against meat; it is one of extreme liberality, (Eat as you have been accustomed to eat.'(1) There is a whole sermon devoted to the expansion of the text, 'defilement comes not from eating meat but from sin' (Amagandha Sutta), which, as it seems to me, rather implies that meat was pretty generally eaten (though the practice was looked upon by the stricter sort as culpable) than that it was not eaten at all. Buddha himself (perhaps) died of eating pork, the flesh of a wild boar, an idea so abhorrent to later Buddhism that the words sukaramaddava, 'boar-tender' (-loin? ) was interpreted either as a sauce or as a vegetable eaten by a boar; some said bamboosprouts, other said a kind of mushroom, although no sauce or vegetable is known by the name of 'boar-tender.'(2) It is in the light of such facts as these that the oft-repeated rule " not to keep a store of raw meat" is to be interpreted. The rule is generally given in connection with other purely sumptuary regulations, such as not to keep a store of raw rice, and far from seeming to prohibit meat it appears to imply its use, the real prohibition being not against meat (any more than against rice), but against the possession of a superfluous store. Thus in the Gandhara Jataka, No. 406, it is said that a store of salt and sugar even for one day, punadiva, used to be condemned, but now Buddhists hoard even for the third day. Notable examples of freedom in respect of eating meat are to be found in the Mahavagga, which gives other illustrations of liberality. Thus, as to the other, we are told that, in the northern country, for Buddhists to bathe more than once a fortnight is a sin, but in the southern country they may bathe more frequently, because it is the custom of the country. Here there is no climatic necessity for the change, since what is called ---------------------- 1. Literally, " Ye shall eat as has been eaten" (Mahasudassana Sutta). 2. Compare the Questions of Milinda, iv. 3.22 and the discussion as to bamboo, mushrooms, or sauce, Sacred Books of the East, xxxv, p. 244. Boar flesh is common village-meat. Compare what the pigs sap in Jat. No. 388: mamsatthaya hi posiyamase, " we are fattened for our flesh" (p. 289), and further references below, p. 462. Still, some plant-names begin with 'boar-,' and Buddha ought to have the benefit of the doubt. p. 459 'northern' and 'southern' is practically in the same clime. A still better case is afforded by the similar regulation as to coverlets. In the northern and middle part of the country, because it is there customary to have coverlets made of vegetable matter, the Buddhists are to follow this custom; but when they go south, where (as in Ujjain) people use animal skins as coverlets, there they may use animal skins--a tacit condonation of the slaughter of animals. As a medicinal remedy the Buddhist may take intoxicating liquors(1) and the flesh and blood and fat of bears, alligators, swine, and asses. But a rule found in the same work, vi. 31. 14, goes much further than this and really gives the gist of the whole matter in permitting the use of meat, if not killed for the express purpose of feeding the Buddhist. The same rule holds as to fish. The Buddhists may eat it if they "do not see, do not hear, do not suspect" that the fish was caught especially for their use (ibid.). Elephants' flesh and that of horses may not be eaten in time of famine, but this is because they are parts of the "attributes of royalty";(2) nor that of dogs and snakes, but because such meat is disgusting. Absolutely forbidden at such a time is only the flesh of human beings(3) and of other carnivora (ib. vi. 23. 9ff.). In regard to hurting sentient things, Brahmanism holds theoretically that even trees, plants, and grasses are kinds of animals. They differ only in being stable (fixed) instead of mobile; but a long argument which I have cited elsewhere from the Great Epic shows that plants really see, hear, feel, and smell, as well as possess the more obvious sense of touch, and that, therefore, they are living, conscious things, endowed like other animals ---------------------- 1. A century after Buddha's death the Buddhist church (according to tradition, Cullavagga. xii. 1) discussed the question whether it was per-missible to drink unfermented toddy. The Buddhist was a teetotaler, as was (ordinarily) the Brahman priest, but in this regard the church as a whole appears to have been much stricter than the orthodox Hindus (not of the priestly caste), who have always been addicted to intoxicants. Even Brahman priests, north of the Nerbudda, were rum-drinkers. Baudh. I. 2. 4. 2. Compare Jataka No.397, p.322, assa nama rajabhoga, "horses are kings' property." 3. Cannibalism has left its trace in India in the stories of flesh-eating Yakkas and Pisacas, native of the Gilgit region (Dr. Grierson, in JRAS. Jan. 1906; Jataka, 537). p. 460 with their own part of the anima mundi. This, sociologically, is the older view as contrasted with that of the Buddhists, who hold that a tree, for example, is 'conscious' only as containing a living being (a dryad). Plants in themselves possess only one organ of sense (feeling). So there is naturally less horror of injury to plant-life (as plant) among Buddhists than among non-Buddhists (the Brahmans and their followers),(1) though rebirth as a plant is more a theoretical possibility than an actual probability to both parties of believers in Karma. According to a rather late compendium of heresies, the Brahmajala Sutta, the Buddhist recluses, despite the tightening bonds of conventional friarhood, still continued to injure growing plants, though it was wrong to do so, as it was wrong " to accept raw meat " and to kill living things. This reveals that raw meat was accepted often enough to make it worth while to animadvert upon the practice. But even this Sutta (like the rules for novices) does not prohibit the eating of meat. In the Edicts of Asoka there are several injunctions against cruelty, but it is ordered merely that (even for sacrifice) no animals be killed "in future, " with a recommendation to respect the sacredness of life. Yet it is evident from the Fifth Pillar Edict that the killing of animals was not unusual. Certain animals in the twenty-seventh year of Asoka's reign were-made exempt from slaughter, as were "all quadrupeds which are not eaten or otherwise utilized by man," a clear intimation that previously the slaughter of animals was not uncommon and that '' the more complete abstention from injury to animate creatures and from slaughter of living beings" was, as proclaimed in the Seventh Pillar Edict, brought about by Asoka, that is, a couple of centuries after Buddha's death.(2) ---------------------- 1. There is, unfortunately, no common name for the Brahmanized horde as there is for the followers of Buddha. I have sometimes for the horde used 'orthodox,' as the Brahmans (i.e. the priests) use heterodox ('unbelievers') especially of the Buddhists; but the orthodox were anything but a united fold, though they called themselves all, as against Buddhists,'believers' On plants as 'having only one organ,' see Mahavagga iii. 1.2. 2. The Edicts, howerer, are not for Buddhists alone but for all the realm and in this particular may be aimed against Brahmanic (now heterodox! see the last note) rather than Buddhistic practices. Never- theless, as no party distinction is made it may be presumed that the Buddhists also needed a stricter rule. In connection with Brahmanic practices, it must be noticed that beef-eating in the Mahabharata, though common, is confined to ceremonial (sacrificial) consumption. p. 461 The Jatakas contain numerous instances revealing great freedom in respect of flesh-eating. For example, the Bodhisat as Sakka, in the Kumbha-Jataka, forbids the use of intoxicants, but permits the enjoyment of flesh (mamsodanam sappipayasam bhunja; No. 512, p. 20). So in Jat. No. 528, p. 235, the Bodhisat as a mendicant, mahabodhiparibbajako, eat the flesh of a monkey, makkatamamsam khaditva, and uses its skin as a robe, though only in order to inculcate a lesson. In its Sanskritized form, in the .jatakamala, this monkey appears as an illusion (perhaps because of the audience; much as the "fatted calf" is discreetly omitted from another parable in India at the present day) and the Bodhisat merely "removes a skin made by himself" and then wears it, after causing the flesh to disappear (carma'paniya sesam antardhapayam asa; sa tannirmittam vanaracarma bibhrat, etc. HOS. 1, p. 147, 1. 19). That the deer is a warrior's natural food is admitted in a casual remark addressed to a priest, Jat. No. 483, p. 273, annam migo brahmana khattiyassa; but though a king hunts it is meritorious to renounce the sport and devote oneself to charity. In No. 504, p. 437, the king hunts not only deer but wild boar, migasukaradayo vadhitva, and eats broiled venison, angarapakkam migamamsam. In No. 315, the Bodhisat gets a wagon-load of venison as a gift; but he takes the hunter from his cruel occupation, luddaka-kamma. In No. 12, a king is persuaded to stop killing deer and all other animals. To eat the flesh of a golden peacock, moro, which gives eternal youth and immortality (ib. 159 and 491) is perhaps too great a temptation to allow of its being cited as an example; yet the peacock was forbidden food either to the Brahman (Baudh. I. 12. 7) or to the pre-Asokan Buddhist (v. note, loc. cit. S.B.E). Jat. Nos. 451 and 496 reveal that meat-eating is almost a matter of course, even on the part of the Bodhisat, who in No. 199 eats beef, gomamsam; while the forest-ascetic (No. 496, p. 371, st. 280) says "I eat meat," just as he speaks of eating jujubes, lotus, etc.: sakam bhisam madhum mamsam badaramalakani ca, tani abhatva bhunjami atthi me so pariggaho. In the introduction to the Sulasa Jataka, No. 419, we have a scene depicting a pleasure-garden, where thieves and servants indulge in fish, flesh, and intoxicants, macchamamsasuradini, which shows the vulgar popularity of flesh- food. But in No. 436 a noble lady of Benares is fed on ghee, p. 462 rice, fish, and flesh (p. 527, 1. 22) by the demon who would woo her. Compare No. 434, where meat is eaten as a dainty. Large bags of leather,(1) mahante cammapasibbake, to hold money, are referred to in No. 336. Leather is used to make chariot-harness (No. 22) and the clothing of a mendicant, cammasatako paribbajako, in No. 324. Roast pig is used to celebrate a marriage-feast (Nos. 30 and 286) and roast lizard is recognized as good food (in No. 333);though it is a false Buddhist ascetic, dussilatapaso, who in Nos. 138 and 325 is fond of such diet. But crow's meat is sent (as earnest of better) to the Bodhisat by the king in No. 214, and in No. 220 the scholiast tells a story (to illustrate a Jataka verse) which implies that a king regularly ate meat (animals might be slaughtered in Benares any day except on fast-days). No. 241, p. 245, even notes the occasion on which, according to tradition, men who had eaten all the fresh meat they could, first began to dry it: tasmim kila kale vallurakaranam udapaditi vadanti. A very good example of the casual, matter-of-course way in which meat-eating is referred to will be found in Jataka No. 106 (p. 417), wherein a young man is advised by his father, the Bodhisat, not to marry, simply because he will have to run errands for his wife: "When she wants to eat fish or meat or has need of ghee or salt or rice, etc." (and sends you to do her errands), yada macchamamsadini va khaditukama bhavissati sappilonatanduladihi va pan' assa attho bhavissati. Here the worldly fat girl is imagined as eating meat as naturally as salt, etc. The whole matter of meat-eating is epitomized in the verse ascribed to the Bodhisat in the Telovado Jataka (No. 246): bhunjamano pi sappanno na papena upalippati, that is, according to the context, if one who has divine wisdom eats fish or meat, even when he knows it is prepared for him, he does no wrong.(2) Not meat-eating per se, not the fact that meat ---------------------- 1. The common use of leather, as Prof. Bloomfield remarked when this paper was read, has been recently exemplified by excavations made in the Northern deserts. Leather nooses are made in Jat. 206 (p. 153). 2. In the exaggerated language of the Bodhisat, one may even eat the flesh of the donor's wife or child. Only the slayer is sinful, not the eater. The comment is: samamsakam bhattam adasi... samano Gotamo janam uddissa-katam mamsam bhunjati, "He gave meat-food Gotama the ascetic knowingly eats meat prepared especially for him." Buddha here accepts in full the precepts of the Bodhisat. p. 463 was prepared especially for the eater, not even the fact that the latter knows of the circumstances, makes the eater guilty of sin. But he must eat with no evil in the heart, no indulgence of appetite.(1) With the same liberality, which distinguishes the ethics of Buddha from that of his ascetic rivals, we find the rule that no evil Karma attaches to an act of unintentional wrong- doing, as laid down in the Kuru-dhamma of Jataka No. 276 (p. 377), acetanakam kammam na hoti, the Brahmanic rule being that there must be expiation for unintentional as for intentional sin.(2) Devadatta, Buddha's rival, permitted no eating of flesh-meat; Buddha permitted it with restrictions as to the spirit in which it was eaten. In other words, early Buddhism was opposed to this form of asceticism as to other austerities, which in themselves are valueless.(3) The great distinction between killing and eating may seem rather pharisaical, but it existed. To kill an animal, to be butcher, fowler, or fisher, was wrong, and to connive at slaughter in order to gratify appetite was also wrong.(4) But when the beast had been killed without prior connivance on the part of the Buddhist the flesh might be accepted and eaten. The early Buddhist seems to have thought that, as the animal was dead anyway, he might as well make use of it and did not trouble his conscience with questions of 'tainted' offerings. If uncommonly ascetic he might refuse it as being a delicacy, but not because meat as meat constituted sinful diet. Probably the later accession of Brahmanical converts tended to the greater strictness of the Buddhist in this regard, until he came to say ---------------------- 1. Compare the passage (cited by Mr. Rouse at this place in his translation) from Hardy's Manual, p.327: " Those who take life are in fault, but not the persons who eat the flesh. My priests [in contrast with those of Devadatta] have permission to eat whatever is customary to eat in any place or country, so that it be done without the indulgence of appetite, or evil desire." The Cullavagga on this point, vii. 3.14, mentions only fish, but the contention is the same. 2. Compare with this No. 528 (p. 237): akamakaraniya- smim kuv-idha papena lippati. For the Brahmanic rule, see JRAS. July, 1906, p. 584. 3. See the Majjhima Nikaya, pp. 77-8, for a catalogue of useless austerities. 4. Compare Jat. No. 506 (p.458), where the king-snake refuses to eat frogs especially killed for him, with the idea "n'esa mam nissaya maressatiti'' (na khadati), "not for my sake shall he kill." p. 464 with St. Paul 'If eating meat my brother do offend I will eat no more meat.' The theory of transmigration had, I imagine, little to do with the matter either with Buddhists or with Brahmans; though Buddha admits that a man may be reborn as an animal, for, in speaking of the death of a perfected saint, he couples together, as the fruit of such saintliness, the destruction of "hell and rebirth as an animal." The Jatakas, too, recognize man's rebirth as a beast, but these are not of the earliest Buddhistic era, and, generally speaking, the primitive Buddhist is reborn as man and, if not, he is more likely to reappear as an unfathered divinity in consequence of virtue than as an animal in consequence of evil.(1) At any rate, man's rebirth as an animal (with a possible cannibalism) is never suggested as a reason why a Buddhist should not eat meat, although the Brahmanic view was that the animal later would eventually take revenge by eating (in another life) the former eater. Yet even here the idea is not that one should abstain from ? flesh through fear of eating a reincarnated relative. To take life, in distinction from eating meat, results in going to hell or in rebirth either as an animal, a ghost, pettivisaye, a demon, asupakaye, or a human being of short life, appayukasam- vattanikam (hoti ti, 'said the Bodhisat'), Jat. 55 (p.275). ---------------------- 1. On the knotty question as to how a future Buddha could be born as an animal, cf. Jatakamala xxxiii. st. 3. Despite his sufficient wisdom dharmasanjni 'pi, he had acquired "bits of (evil) Karma," karmalesans tans tan samasadya, which reduced him to a beast. The Bodhisat himself explains rebirth in animal form as due to neglect in a previous life to perform good works (kusalakammassa akattata), as he says Jat.31 (p.205, lines 1 and 7, to Sujata): tvam pana kusalam akatva tiracchanayoniyam nibbatta. The same question arises in regard to the sins committed by Bodhisattas, such as reverting to sensuality (Jet. 251), keeping and knocking down his wife (No. 199), seducing a girl (No. 62), or even leading a band of robbers. In the last case the Jataka-maker ascribes such faults rather vaguely "to the stars,?' nakkhattadosena, Jat, No.279 (p. 389), apparently forgetful of the Bodhisat's own words, kim karissanti taraka(No.49, Nakkhatta-Jat.). Rather an interesting statement is made in Jat. 431 (p.499), to the effect that on some (unexplained) occasions, ekaccesu thanesu, Bodhisats may destroy life, commit adultery, and drink intoxicants, sura; but they may not tell deceitful lies, musavado, which destroy the reality of things. Truth is the highest virtue. In mediaeval Sk. literature abstention from meat is a sign of virtue, as in the Hitopadesa, where, more specifically, eating meat ''on the Lard's day" (1. 3) is unlawful.