Quest for Nirvana in Kim and Buddhacharitam
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Central Department of English Kirtipur, Kathmandu
Abstract
This dissertation compares the quest for nirvana, the supreme state of bliss, the main
characters the Lama in Rudyard Kipling‟s Kim on the on hand and the Buddha in
Ashwaghosa‟s Buddhacharitam on the other. In the both texts the protagonists the Lama in
the novel Kim and the Buddha in biographical text Buddhacharitam are in the quest for
nirvana despite the fact that there is a vast gap of time of the publication, location of the
authors and other issues between these texts. There are some distinct features of these
characters and texts as well. Kim‟s quest is a journey to fulfill his worldly ambition and
confined with the pursue of his identity in comparison with the quest of the Lama who is
detached from the worldly attachments and indulged in the journey for finding out the „river
of arrow‟ in order to clean his sins and to transform him from ignorance into the „fountain of
wisdom‟. The quest of Buddha as it represents in Ashwaghosa‟s Buddhacharitam is much
wider and meaningful to talk about the journey of nirvana in the sense that he gets nirvana
through the self-meditation, and enlightenment attained through transcendental meditation
has been further used for liberating the mankind form sufferings. The quest for the nirvana
and its achievement in Kim is particularly in order to get our body or life released from the
sins which is closer to the Christian narration of sins associated to the Adam and Eve. Both
texts are closer to the Mahayani cult of Buddhism that tells that nirvana is not only for the
one who attains it, it is for others as well as Buddha in Buddhacharitam and the Lama in
Kim believe and get inclined to this mission of enlightening others too after attaining the
nirvana.