22b: 500 Monastics become Arahats – 758
see what I can do. You are not aware that intellectual might is more powerful
than physical force. I will make you aware of that fact within a few days.
Na heva sabbattha balena kiccaṁ,
balañ-hi bālassa vadhāya hoti,
karissāmi te Nāga-rājā anatthaṁ,
yo me vadhī puttake dubbalāya.
O elephant king, not everything can be accomplished by means of physical
force alone; unwise use of physical strength can be suicidal. You have
mercilessly crushed to death my helpless children; I will bring about your
destruction within a few days.
After thus making this war-cry, the skylark managed within two or three days to
gain the friendship of a crow by waiting upon it. Being delighted by the
skylark’s pleasant behaviour, the crow asked her: “Is there any thing I can do for
you?” The skylark replied: “What I want to ask you as a favour is to cause
damage to the eyes of the rogue elephant that used to roam about alone; that is
the assistance I need.” The crow gave his word: “I will do it.”
The skylark then went to a big bluebottle fly and formed a friendship with it in
a like manner. When the fly asked her what she wanted, she requested: “When
my friend the crow has damaged the eyes of the lone rogue elephant, it is my
wish that you help me by laying your eggs in the sockets of the elephant’s
damaged eyes.”
When the bluebottle fly gave her assurance for co-operation, saying: “Yes, I
will,” the skylark approached a frog and sought its friendship as before. The
frog asked her what it could do to help her and she replied: “When the lone
rogue elephant has gone blind through the assistance of my two friends, the
crow and the fly, and is looking for water to quench his thirst, I wish you to
croak from the top of the hill. When the elephant climbs up the hill after
hearing your voice, you might get down to the bottom of the cliff to make a
sound from there. This is all the assistance I look for from my frog friend.” The
frog, likewise, gave his promise to assist the skylark.
On the following day, the crow pounded the eyes of the elephant with its beak as
requested by the skylark; the bluebottle fly laid its eggs in the damaged eyes.
Suffering painfully from damaged eyes now infested with maggots and from
intense thirst, the rogue elephant groped blindly after water.
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The frog then