Dhammapada Verse 323
Hatthacariyapubbaka Bhikkhu Vatthu
Na hi etehi yanehi
gaccheyya agatam disam
yatha' ttana sudantena
danto dantena gacchati.
Verse 323: Indeed, not by any means of transport (such as elephants and
horses) can one go to the place one has never been before (i.e., Nibbana); but
by thoroughly taming oneself, the tamed one1 can get to that place
(i.e., Nibbana).
1. The tamed one: One, who having first controlled the senses, has later
developed Magga Insight. (The Commentary)
The Story of the Bhikkhu Who Had Been a Trainer of Elephants
While residing at the Jetavana monastery, the Buddha uttered Verse (323) of
this book, with reference to a bhikkhu who had previously been an elephant
trainer.
On one occasion, some bhikkhus saw an elephant trainer and his elephant on
the bank of the river Aciravati. As the trainer was finding it difficult to
control the elephant, one of the bhikkhus, who was an ex-elephant trainer, told
the other bhikkhus how it could be easily handled. The elephant trainer hearing
him did as told by the bhikkhu, and the elephant was quickly subdued. Back at
the monastery, the bhikkhus related the incident to the Buddha. The Buddha
called the ex-elephant trainer bhikkhu to him and said, "O vain bhikkhu,
who is yet far away from Magga and Phala ! You do not gain anything by taming
elephants. There is no one who can get to a place where one has never been
before (i.e.. Nibbana) by taming elephants; only one who has tamed himself can
get there."
Then the Buddha spoke in verse as follows:
Verse 323: Indeed, not by any means of transport (such
as elephants and horses) can one go to the place one has never been
before (i.e., Nibbana); but by thoroughly taming oneself, the tamed
one can get to that place (i.e., Nibbana).
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