Help | Home » Tipitaka » Sutta Pitaka » Khuddaka Nikaya » Dhammapada » This translation

Dhammapada XXIII
(vv. 320-333)

Nagavagga

Elephants

Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.
For free distribution only.

Alternate translation: Buddharakkhita

Previous chapter | Next chapter

320:
I — like an elephant in battle,
enduring an arrow shot from a bow —
will endure a false accusation,
for the mass of people
have 		no principles.
321:
The tamed is the one
they take into assemblies.
The tamed is the one
the king mounts.
The tamed who endures
a false accusation
is, among human beings,
	the best.
322-323:
Excellent are tamed mules,
	tamed thoroughbreds,
	tamed horses from Sindh.
Excellent, tamed tuskers,
	great elephants.
But even more excellent
are those 	self-tamed.
For not by these mounts could you go
to the land unreached,
as the tamed one goes
by taming, well-taming, himself.
324*:
The tusker, Dhanapalaka,
deep in rut, is hard to control.
Bound, he won't eat a morsel:
the tusker misses
the elephant wood.
325:
When torpid & over-fed,
a sleepy-head lolling about
like a stout hog, fattened on fodder:
a dullard enters the womb
	over &
	over again.
326:
Before, this mind went wandering
	however it pleased,
	wherever it wanted,
	by whatever way that it liked.
Today I will hold it aptly in check —
as one wielding a goad, an elephant in rut.
327:
Delight in heedfulness.
Watch over your own mind.
Lift yourself up
from the hard-going way,
like a tusker sunk in the mud.
328-330*:
If you gain a mature companion —
a fellow traveler, right-living, enlightened —
overcoming all dangers
	go with him, gratified,
	mindful.
If you don't gain a mature companion —
a fellow traveler, right-living, enlightened —
	go alone
like a king renouncing his kingdom,
like the elephant in the Matanga wilds,
	his herd.
Going alone is better,
there's no companionship with a fool.
	Go alone,
doing no evil, at peace,
like the elephant in the Matanga wilds.
331-333:
A blessing: 	friends when the need arises.
A blessing: 	contentment with whatever there is.
Merit at the ending of life is a blessing.
A blessing: 	the abandoning of all suffering
				&
stress.
A blessing in the world: 	reverence to your mother.
A blessing: 	reverence to your father as well.
A blessing in the world: 	reverence to a contemplative.
A blessing: 	reverence for a brahman, too.
A blessing into old age is virtue.
A blessing: 	conviction established.
A blessing: 	discernment attained.
The non-doing of evil things is
		a blessing.

Revised: Sunday 2005-07-03
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/canon/sutta/khuddaka/dhp/tb0/dhp-23-tb0.html