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Buddhism (Theravāda) · Source book

The Elephant

Dhammapada Chapter XXIII — The Elephant (vv. 320–333)

N=1 fine-grained distillation. Source: Müller, SBE X (1881), Gutenberg #2017. Quote anchors are working text pending Phase 7 char-for-char verification. Methodology & tags: ../00-methodology.md.

Chapter role

The Nāga-vagga ("the elephant chapter") takes the trained war-elephant as the controlling image for self-mastery: as a tamed elephant endures the arrow and carries the king, so the self-tamed person endures abuse and reaches the goal. It then turns to solitude over bad company, and closes with a litany of what is genuinely "pleasant."

Atomic statements

Ch23-C1: Silently endure abuse as the battle-elephant endures the arrow, for the world is ill-natured. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+ETHICS)

  • Dhp 320: "Silently shall I endure abuse as the elephant in battle endures the arrow sent from the bow: for the world is ill-natured."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch23-C2: The tamed one is best among men — the one who silently endures abuse, as a tamed elephant is led to battle and carries the king. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 321: "They lead a tamed elephant to battle, the king mounts a tamed elephant; the tamed is the best among men, he who silently endures abuse."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Depends on: Ch23-C1

Ch23-C3: Tamed animals are good, but he who tames himself is better still. (FOUNDATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+SELF)

  • Dhp 322: "Mules are good, if tamed, and noble Sindhu horses, and elephants with large tusks; but he who tames himself is better still."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch23-C4: No animal carries one to the untrodden country (Nirvana); only the well-tamed self conveys the tamed man there. (FOUNDATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+LIBERATION)

  • Dhp 323: "For with these animals does no man reach the untrodden country (Nirvana), where a tamed man goes on a tamed animal, viz. on his own well-tamed self."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Depends on: Ch23-C3 · Note: Müller renders nibbāna "Nirvana / the untrodden country."

Ch23-C5: The bound elephant Dhanapālaka refuses food, longing for the grove — an image of the mind chafing under restraint yet pulled toward its true home. (EXHORTATION / MIND+CRAVING)

  • Dhp 324: "The elephant called Dhanapalaka, his temples running with sap, and difficult to hold, does not eat a morsel when bound; the elephant longs for the elephant grove."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Ch23-C6: The gluttonous, sleepy, slothful fool, like a hog fed on wash, is born again and again. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING+KARMA)

  • Dhp 325: "If a man becomes fat and a great eater, if he is sleepy and rolls himself about, that fool, like a hog fed on wash, is born again and again."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Ch23-C7: The mind once wandered as it pleased; now I will hold it in, as the rider with the hook holds the furious elephant — so watch your thoughts and pull yourself from the mire. (OPERATIONAL / MIND+DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 326–327: "This mind of mine went formerly wandering about as it liked… but I shall now hold it in thoroughly, as the rider who holds the hook holds in the furious elephant." / "Be not thoughtless, watch your thoughts! Draw yourself out of the evil way, like an elephant sunk in mud."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch23-C8: Walk with a prudent, wise companion overcoming all dangers; if none is found, walk alone — better alone than with a fool, like an elephant in the forest. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+ETHICS)

  • Dhp 328–330: "If a man find a prudent companion who walks with him… he may walk with him, overcoming all dangers, happy…" / "If a man find no prudent companion… let him walk alone, like a king who has left his conquered country behind,--like an elephant in the forest." / "It is better to live alone, there is no companionship with a fool; let a man walk alone, let him commit no sin, with few wishes…"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch23-C9: What is truly pleasant: friends in their season, contentment, a good work at death's hour, the giving up of grief — and lasting virtue, rooted faith, attained insight, and the avoidance of sins. (EXHORTATION / ETHICS+LIBERATION)

  • Dhp 331–333: "If an occasion arises, friends are pleasant… a good work is pleasant in the hour of death; the giving up of all grief is pleasant." / "Pleasant in the world is the state of a mother… a Samana… a Brahmana." / "Pleasant is virtue lasting to old age, pleasant is a faith firmly rooted; pleasant is attainment of intelligence, pleasant is avoiding of sins."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
Enduring abuse C1, C2 Silent endurance as the mark of the tamed
Self-taming is supreme C3, C4 Taming the self surpasses taming animals; only it reaches Nirvana
Restraining the mind C5, C6, C7 The unruly mind must be hooked and held; sloth breeds rebirth
Solitude over bad company C8 Walk with the wise, else walk alone
What is truly pleasant C9 The goods of virtue, faith, insight, and peace

Step 5 — Internal tensions

Apparent only: C8 ("friends are pleasant," v.331) sits beside the praise of walking alone (vv.329–330). Resolved by the qualifier — companionship is good if the companion is wise; otherwise solitude is better. Not a contradiction.

Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles

Ch23-P1: Silently endure abuse as the tamed elephant endures the arrow

The world is ill-natured; the self-controlled person bears reproach in silence, and this endurance marks the best among men.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: DISCIPLINE+ETHICS · Covers: C1, C2 · Evidence: Dhp 320–321

Ch23-P2: Taming the self surpasses all other mastery and alone reaches the goal

Tamed animals are good, but self-taming is better still; no beast carries one to the untrodden country (Nirvana) — only one's own well-tamed self does.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: DISCIPLINE+SELF+LIBERATION · Covers: C3, C4 · Evidence: Dhp 322–323 · Untranslatable: nibbāna ("Nirvana / the untrodden country")

Ch23-P3: The unruly mind must be hooked and held

The mind that once wandered freely must be reined in like a furious elephant; heedlessness and sloth (the hog fed on wash) breed repeated rebirth, so one must watch one's thoughts and draw oneself out of the mire.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: MIND+DISCIPLINE+CRAVING · Covers: C5, C6, C7 · Evidence: Dhp 324–327

Ch23-P4: Seek the wise companion, else walk alone

Walk with a prudent, sober, wise companion and overcome all dangers; finding none, walk alone — for there is no companionship with a fool, and solitude is better than bad company.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: DISCIPLINE+ETHICS · Covers: C8 · Evidence: Dhp 328–330

Ch23-P5: The genuine pleasures are virtue, faith, insight, and peace

What is truly pleasant is timely friendship, contentment, a good deed at death, the release of grief, and above all lasting virtue, rooted faith, attained insight, and the avoidance of sins.

  • Tier: EXHORTATION · Domain: ETHICS+LIBERATION · Covers: C9 · Evidence: Dhp 331–333

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Verses
Ch23-P1 C1, C2 Dhp 320–321
Ch23-P2 C3, C4 Dhp 322–323
Ch23-P3 C5, C6, C7 Dhp 324–327
Ch23-P4 C8 Dhp 328–330
Ch23-P5 C9 Dhp 331–333

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: 14/14 verses captured by ≥1 atomic statement (100%).
  • Orphaned: 0%.
  • Principles: 5 (within the 3–12 range).
  • Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): Ch23-P1 (enduring abuse), P3-as-mind-discipline, P4 (wise company), and P5 (the genuine goods) read as intelligible ethical/psychological claims without Buddhist metaphysics. Frame divergence: P2's goal is nibbāna (the "untrodden country" — not a heaven, not annihilation) and P3 invokes repeated rebirth ("born again and again") — flag both for the Atlas: the CLAIM (self-mastery is the highest mastery; heedlessness has grave cost) may converge, while the WARRANT (Nirvana as soteriological terminus; saṃsāric rebirth) is frame-specific.