<h2 id='chap18'>THE ELEPHANT THAT SPARED LIFE</h2>
<p class='c004'>At that time the Bodisat was born as a
nobleman’s son. On the naming-day
they gave him the name of Prince Magha, and
when he grew up he was known as “Magha
the young Brahmin.”</p>
<p>His parents procured him a wife from a
family of equal rank; and, increasing in sons
and daughters, he became a great giver of
gifts, and kept the Five Commandments.</p>
<p>In that village there were as many as thirty
families; and one day the men of those
families stopped in the middle of the village
to transact some village business. The Bodisat
removed with his feet the lumps of soil on
the place where he stood, and made the spot
convenient to stand on; but another came up
and stood there. Then he smoothed out another
spot, and took his stand there; but another
man came and stood upon it. Still the
<SPAN name='Page_118'></SPAN>Bodisat tried again and again, with the same
result, until he had made convenient standing-room
for all the thirty.</p>
<p>The next time he had an open-roofed shed
put up there; and then pulled that down, and
built a hall, and had benches spread in it, and
a water-pot placed there. On another occasion
those thirty men were reconciled by the
Bodisat, who confirmed them in the Five
Commandments; and thenceforward he continued
with them in works of piety.</p>
<p>Whilst they were so living they used to
rise up early, go out with bill-hooks and crowbars
in their hands, tear up with the crowbars
the stones in the four high roads and village
paths, and roll them away, take away the
trees which would be in the way of vehicles,
make the rough places plain, form causeways,
dig ponds, build public halls, give gifts, and
keep the Commandments—thus, in many
ways, all the dwellers in the village listened to
the exhortations of the Bodisat, and kept the
Commandments.</p>
<p>Now the village headman said to himself:
<SPAN name='Page_119'></SPAN>“I used to have great gain from fines, and
taxes, and pot-money, when these fellows
drank strong drink, or took life, or broke the
other Commandments. But now Magha the
young Brahmin has determined to have the
Commandments kept, and permits none to
take life, or to do anything else that is wrong.
I’ll make them keep the Commandments with
a vengeance!”</p>
<p>And he went in a rage to the King, and
said: “O King! there are a number of robbers
going about sacking the villages!”</p>
<p>“Go and bring them up!” said the King
in reply.</p>
<p>And he went, and brought back all those
men as prisoners, and had it announced to
the King that the robbers were brought up.
And the King, without inquiring what they
had done, gave orders to have them all trampled
to death by elephants!</p>
<p>Then they made them all lie down in the
courtyard, and fetched the elephant. And the
Bodisat exhorted them, saying: “Keep the
Commandments in mind. Regard them all—the
<SPAN name='Page_120'></SPAN>slanderer, and the King, and the elephant—with
feelings as kind as you harbor towards
yourselves!”</p>
<p>And they did so.</p>
<p>Then men led up the elephant; but though
they brought him to the spot, he would not
begin his work, but trumpeted forth a mighty
cry, and took to flight. And they brought up
another and another, but they all ran away.</p>
<p>“There must be some drug in their possession,”
said the King; and gave orders to have
them searched. So they searched, but found
nothing, and told the King so.</p>
<p>“Then they must be repeating some spell.
Ask them if they have any spell to utter.”</p>
<p>The officials asked them, and the Bodisat
said there was. And they told the King, and
he had them all called before him, and said:
“Tell me that spell you know!”</p>
<p>Then the Bodisat spoke, and said: “O King!
we have no other spell but this—that we destroy
no life, not even of grass; that we take
nothing which is not given to us; that we are
never guilty of unfaithfulness, nor speak
falsehood, nor drink intoxicants; that we exercise
<SPAN name='Page_121'></SPAN>ourselves in love, and give gifts; that
we make rough places plain, dig ponds, and
put up rest-houses—this is our spell, this is
our defense, this is our strength!”</p>
<p>Then the King had confidence in them, and
gave them all the property in the house of
the slanderer, and made him their slave; and
bestowed, too, the elephant upon them, and
made them a grant of the village.</p>
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