A selfish person is one who only thinks about himself or herself, and to some extent Kisa Gotami was being selfish because we are humans and it is natural for us to die. We do not easily accept the death of our loved ones. Same has happened with Kisa Gotami. As it was her only child, she did not want him to die finally went to Buddha to ask for help.
The Sermon at Benares – Comprehensive Web Content
This is an expanded study resource for The Sermon at Benares by Betty Renshaw (First Flight). Use this alongside the chapter notes for complete board exam preparation.
Detailed Summary
Siddhartha Gautama, sheltered as a prince, encounters old age, sickness, and death. He renounces his royal life, achieves enlightenment as the Buddha, and delivers his first sermon at Benares. The central episode: grief-stricken Kisa Gotami asks Buddha to revive her dead son. Buddha sends her to find mustard seeds from a house untouched by death. Every house has known death. Kisa Gotami understands: death is universal and inescapable.
Theme Analysis
Universality of Death
No household is untouched by death. This universality places individual grief in a larger context of shared human experience.
Acceptance
Buddha teaches that grief from attachment is natural but must be transcended through understanding impermanence.
Teaching Through Experience
Buddha gives Kisa Gotami a task that lets her discover truth herself — more powerful than direct instruction.
Compassion
Buddha’s approach respects Kisa Gotami’s pain while guiding her to wisdom.
Character Study
Compassionate, wise, patient, uses indirect teaching
Grief-stricken, desperate, ultimately wise through experience
Literary Devices & Techniques
- Parable: Kisa Gotami’s quest is a teaching parable
- Irony: The impossible task IS the lesson
- Repetition: Going house to house, same answer
- Symbolism: Mustard seeds (common) = death (equally common)
Board Exam Questions with Model Answers
Q: What task did Buddha give Kisa Gotami? (2 marks)
Model Answer: Buddha asked her to bring mustard seeds from a house where no one had ever died. Kisa Gotami went from house to house but every family had experienced death. She realised death is universal, which was exactly what Buddha intended her to learn.
Q: How did Kisa Gotami understand the truth about life and death? (5 marks)
Model Answer: By visiting every house and finding that death had touched each one, Kisa Gotami understood that her grief was not unique. Death is the common fate of all living beings. This experiential learning — discovering through her own journey rather than being told — made the truth deeply personal and transformative. She returned to Buddha not with mustard seeds but with understanding.
Key Vocabulary
Refer to the chapter notes and teacher aid for a complete vocabulary list. Focus on understanding words in context rather than memorising definitions in isolation.
Revision Checklist
- Can you summarise the text in 80 words?
- Can you name all major characters and their traits?
- Can you identify at least 3 literary devices with examples?
- Can you write a 5-mark answer on the main theme?
- Have you practised all textbook exercise questions?