The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 87: The Patient Elephant
While the Blessed One was residing in the Jetavana,
there was a householder living in Savatthi
known to all his neighbours as patient and kind,
but his relatives were wicked and contrived a plot to rob him.
One day they came to the householder
and often worrying him with all kinds of threats
took away a goodly portion of his property.
He did not go to court, nor did he complain,
but tolerated with great forbearance the wrongs he suffered. [1]
The neighbours wondered and began to talk about it,
and rumours of the affair reached the ears of the brethren in Jetavana.
While the brethren discussed the occurence in the assembly hall,
the Blessed One entered and asked
"What was the topic of your conversation?"
And they told him. [2]
Said the Blessed One:
"The time will come when the wicked relatives will find their punishment.
O brethren, this is not the first time that this occurrence took place;
it has happened before,"
and he told them a world-old tale. [3]
Once upon a time, when Brahmadatta was king of Benares,
the Bodhisatta was born in the Himalaya region as an elephant.
He grew up strong and big, and ranged the hills and mountains,
the peaks and caves of the tortuous woods in the valleys.
Once as he went he saw a pleasant tree, and took his food, standing under it. [4]
Then some impertinent monkeys came down out of the tree,
and jumping on the elephant's back, insulted and tormented him greatly;
they took hold of his tusks, pulled his tail and disported themselves,
thereby causing him much annoyance.
The Bodhisatta, being full of patience, kindliness and mercy,
took no notice at all of their misconduct
which the monkeys repeated again and again. [5]
One day the spirit that lived in the tree,
standing upon the tree-trunk, addressed the elephant saying,
"My lord elephant, why dost thou put up with the impudence of these bad monkeys?"
And he asked the question in a couplet as follows: [6]
- "Why dost thou patiently endure each freak
- These mischievous and selfish monkeys wreak?" [7]
The Bodhisatta, on hearing this, replied,
"If, Tree-sprite, I cannot endure these monkeys' ill treatment
without abusing their birth, lineage, and persons,
how can I walk in the eightfold noble path?
But these monkeys will do the same to others thinking them to be like me.
If they do it to any rogue elephant, he will punish them indeed,
and I shall be delivered both from their annoyance
and the guilt of having done harm to others." [8]
Saying this he repeated another stanza: [9]
- "If they will treat another one like me,
- He will destroy them; and I shall be free." [10]
A few days later, the Bodhisatta went elsewhither,
and another elephant, a savage beast, came and stood in his place.
The wicked monkeys thinking him to be like the old one,
climbed upon his back and did as before.
The rogue elephant siezed the monkeys with his trunk,
threw them upon the ground, gored them with his trunk
and trampled them to mincemeat under his feet. [11]
When the Master had ended his teaching,
he declared the truths, and identified the births, saying:
"At that time the mischievous monkeys
were the wicked relatives of the good man,
the rogue elephant was the one who will punish them,
but the virtuous noble elephant
was the Tathagata himself in a former incarnation." [12]
After this discourse one of the brethren rose
and asked leave to propose a question
and when permission was granted he said:
"I have heard the doctrine that wrong should be met with wrong
and the evil doer should be checked by being made to suffer,
for if this were not done
evil would increase and good would disappear.
What shall we do?" [13]
Said the Blessed One: "Nay, I will tell you:
Ye who have left the world
and have adopted this glorious faith of putting aside selfishness,
ye shall not do evil nor return hate for hate.
Nor do ye think that ye can destroy wrong
by retaliating evil for evil and thus increasing wrong.
Leave the wicked to their fate
and their evil deeds will sooner or later
in one way or another bring on their own punishment."
And the Tathagata repeated these stanzas: [14]
- "Who harmeth him that doth no harm
- And stiketh him that striketh not,
- Shall gravest punishment incur
- The which his wickedness begot, - [15]
- "Some of the greatest ills in life
- Either a loathsome dread disease,
- Or dread old age, or loss of mind,
- Or wretched pain without surcease, [16]
- "Or conflagration, loss of wealth;
- Or his nearest kin he shall
- See some one die that's dear to him,
- And then he'll be reborn in hell." [17]
Continue Reading
- The Gospel of Buddha: Preface
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 01: Rejoice
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 02: Samsara and Nirvana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 03: Truth the Saviour
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 04: The Bodhisatta's Birth
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 05: The Ties of Life
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 06: The Three Woes
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 07: The Bodhisatta's Renunciation
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 08: King Bimbisara
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 09: The Bodhisatta's Search
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 10: Uruvela, the Place of Mortification
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 11: Mara, the Evil One
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 12: Enlightenment
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 13: The First Converts
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 14: Brahma's Request
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 15: Upaka
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 16: The Sermon at Benares
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 17: The Sangha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 18: Yasa, the Youth of Benares
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 19: Kassapa
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 20: The Sermon at Rajagaha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 21: The King's Gift
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 22: Sariputta and Moggallana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 23: Anathapindika
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 24: The Sermon on Charity
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 25: Jetavana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 26: The Three Characteristics and the Uncreate
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 27: The Buddha's Father
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 28: Yasodhara
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 29: Rahula
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 30: Jivaka, the Physician
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 31: The Buddha's Parents Attain Nirvana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 32: Women Admitted to the Sangha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 33: The Bhikkhus' Conduct Toward Women
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 34: Visakha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 35: The Uposatha and Patimokkha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 36: The Schism
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 37: The Re-establishment of Concord
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 38: The Bhikkhus Rebuked
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 39: Devadatta
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 40: Name and Form
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 41: The Goal
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 42: Miracles Forbidden
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 43: The Vanity of Worldliness
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 44: Secrecy and Publicity
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 45: The Annihilation of Suffering
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 46: Avoiding the Ten Evils
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 47: The Preacher's Mission
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 48: The Dhammapada
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 49: The Two Brahmans
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 50: Guard the Six Quarters
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 51: Simha's Question Concerning Annihilation
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 52: All Existence is Spiritual
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 53: Identity and Non-Identity
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 54: The Buddha Omnipresent
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 55: One Essence, One Law, One Aim
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 56: The Lesson Given to Rahula
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 57: The Sermon on Abuse
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 58: The Buddha Replies to the Deva
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 59: Words of Instruction
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 60: Amitabha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 61: The Teacher Unknown
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 62: Parables
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 63: The Widow's Two Mites and the Parable of the Three Merchants
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 64: The Man Born Blind
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 65: The Lost Son
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 66: The Giddy Fish
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 67: The Cruel Crane Outwitted
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 68: Four Kinds of Merit
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 69: The Light of the World
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 70: Luxurious Living
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 71: The Communication of Bliss
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 72: The Listless Fool
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 73: Rescue in the Desert
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 74: The Sower
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 75: The Outcast
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 76: The Woman at the Well
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 77: The Peacemaker
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 78: The Hungry Dog
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 79: The Despot
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 80: Vasavadatta
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 81: The Marriage-Feast in Jambunada
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 82: A Party in Search of a Thief
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 83: In the Realm of Yamaraja
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 84: The Mustard Seed
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 85: Following the Master Over the Stream
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 86: The Sick Bhikkhu
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 87: The Patient Elephant
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 88: The Conditions of Welfare
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 89: Sariputta's Faith
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 90: Pataliputta
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 91: The Mirror of Truth
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 92: Ambapali
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 93: The Buddha's Farewell Address
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 94: The Buddha Announces His Death
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 95: Chunda, the Smith
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 96: Metteyya
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 97: The Buddha's Final Entering into Nirvana
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 98: The Three Personalities of the Buddha
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 99: The Purpose of Being
- The Gospel of Buddha:Chapter 100: The Praise of All the Buddhas