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This method of judgment
was so fearsome that people did not dare to swindle one
another or break contracts. Eventually, a monk figured out
a way to cheat the system. A merchant who was planning a
journey gave the monk a measure of gold for safekeeping
until his return. Wanting to cheat the merchant, the monk
melted the gold and poured it into a hollow wooden staff,
skillfully sealing the end so nothing appeared unusual.
When the merchant returned to Pagan, the corrupt monk claimed
that the gold had already been returned.
Brought
before the great pincers, both men stated their case. The
merchant gave testimony without incident and stood aside
for the monk to take his turn. The crook casually handed
his cloak and the staff he had been leaning on to the merchant
and placed his hands between the pincers. His testimony
was, of course, that he had returned all the gold to the
merchant. The pincers did not move. The judges were nonplussed.
Even the people looking on were upset when the pincers failed
to reveal the truth.
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A
weathered Buddha from the Ananda Temple.
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Eventually,
the judges realized what had taken place. The monk was arrested,
and the stolen gold was discovered in his staff. Although
the monk was duly punished and justice was served, the power
of the great pincers had been broken. Never again would
they reveal falsehood. From that point on, justice had to
be served by men. Because liars can convince most people,
however, the city’s business affairs became liable to corruption,
cheating, and thievery.
A
great gift is lost
Today,
it is difficult to imagine life in Pagan’s heyday. Nothing
of the city, its homes or its thorough fares, remains except
for the seemingly random scattering of monoliths. With the
exception of a few special centers, like the Ananda temple
complex, most of the relics are individually unremarkable.
They follow the same basic design: solid pagodas protect
alcoves containing statues of Buddha, each facing a cardinal
direction, and temple interiors give access to similar impassive
icons. But the sheer multitude of these steadfast stone
sentinels is awe inspiring.
I
am told that a prophecy given in Anawrahta’s time dispelled
all vanity in the city’s creation.
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