The: Grey Dream
: When the Queen recounted the vision, the "grey dream-readers"—the sages or seers of the court—pronounced the dream "good".
: They predicted that the child would either become a world-ruling monarch or, more significantly, a "holy child of wondrous wisdom" who would "deliver men from ignorance". The Grey Dream
In Buddhist tradition and literature, the "Grey Dream" refers to the vision experienced by Queen Maya before she gave birth to the Buddha. In the poem, the Queen sees a white elephant (a symbol of wisdom and royal power) entering her side, signaling the arrival of a "holy child". : When the Queen recounted the vision, the
The phrase "The Grey Dream" is most famously associated with the , as described in Edwin Arnold's 1879 epic poem, The Light of Asia . The Prophetic Vision of Queen Maya In the poem, the Queen sees a white
: It represents a state of "becoming" rather than "being." This aligns with the Buddhist creed that "Nothing is permanent... Everything is subject to change".