The goose (haüsa) is a semi-aquatic bird like a large duck, with webbed feet and a long neck. Several species of wild geese are found in northern India. The Sanskrit and Pàëi name haüsa is often incorrectly translated as `swan' but swans are not native to India and were unknown to the ancient Indians. The goose so often referred to in the Tipiñaka and later Buddhist literature is Anser indicus, the Bar-headed Goose. About the size of the domestic goose, this beautiful bird has grey, white and brown plumage and a white head marked with two distinctive black bands. Its gentle, musical `aang aang aang' call is widely acknowledged to be one of the most enchanting in the natural world. The Buddha was sometimes compared with the goose and the bird's characteristics and habits were often used by him as a metaphor for certain spiritual qualities.
The Buddha said that householders are like the peacock in that they are beautifully colored but clumsy fliers while monks and nuns are like the goose, drably colored but able to soar into the sky (Sn.221). Vaïgãsa addressed the Buddha saying: `Quickly send forth your melodious voice, Oh Beautiful One. Like geese stretching out their necks, honk gently with your soft, sonorous voice'(Sn.350). Bar-headed geese are often seen during the winter, feeding in swamps and fields until mid-March when they fly off to nest in Tibet. To the Buddha, this migratory behaviour was suggestive of detachment. He said: `Mindful people exert themselves. They are not attached to any home. Like geese that fly from their lakes, they leave one abode after another behind' (Dhp.91). `Geese fly the path to the sun, sages fly by their psychic powers. Having defeated Màra and his army, the wise are led away from the world' (Dhp.175). Piïgiya used the geese's arrival back in northern India in October as a metaphor for the coming of something wonderful. `Just as a bird might leave a small grove to dwell in a forest full of fruit, so do I, having left narrow-minded teachers, come to He of Wide Vision, like a goose arriving at a great lake'(Sn.1134).
One of the most beautiful legends in the whole of the Buddhist tradition comes from the 12th chapter of the apocryphal Abhiniùkramaõa Såtra and concerns a goose. Once, while walking through the palace garden, Prince Siddhattha saw a goose fall from the sky with an arrow lodged in its wing. He gently nestled the bird in his lap, extracted the arrow and anointed the wound with oil and honey. Soon afterwards, Devadatta sent a message to the palace saying that he had shot the bird and demanding that it be returned to him. Siddhattha replied to the message by saying: `If the goose was dead I would return it forthwith but as it is still alive you have no right to it.' Devadatta sent a second message arguing that it was his skill that had downed the goose and as such it belonged to him. Again Siddhattha refused to give his cousin the bird and asked that an assembly of wise men be called to settle the dispute. This was done and after discussing the matter for some time the most senior of the wise men gave his opinion, saying: `The living belongs to he who cherishes and preserves life, not to he who tries to destroy life.' The assembly agreed with this and Prince Siddhattha was allowed to keep the goose.
Although not found in the Tipiñaka, the story of Prince Siddhattha and the goose may have been based on fact. Whatever the case, it reflects Buddhism's regard for nurturing kindness and respect for all life.