In Bhikkhu Sona's 'Mystery of the breath Nimitta/The Case of the Missing Simile', there is a passage taken from Vis. VIII, 216.
Visuddhimagga VIII, 216: "In fact this resembles an occasion when a number of bhikkhus are sitting together reciting a suttanta. When a bhikkhu asks, ‘What does this sutta appear like to you?’, one says, ‘It appears to me like a great mountain torrent,’ another ‘To me it is like a line of forest trees’, another ‘To me it is like spreading fruit tree giving cool shade’. For the one sutta appears to them differently because of the difference in their perception. Similarly this single meditation subject appears differently because of difference in perception. It is born of perception, its source is perception, it is produced by perception. Therefore it should be understood that when it appears differently it is because of difference in perception (Vis. VIII, 216, p.278)."
Anyone know if Buddhaghosa cooked up this 'occasion' or if it came from the tipitaka?
AIso, I want to know the original purpose of the story of the monks' perceptions of the suttanta.
