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A town (nagara) near Kosambī. When the Buddha found that
he could not persuade the Kosambī monks to refrain from quarrelling, he left
Kosambī alone and unattended, and passing through
Bālaklonakāragāma
and Pācīnavamsadāya, went to Pārileyyaka, where he stayed at the foot of
Bhaddasāla in the
Rakkhitavanasanda. There a certain elephant who, finding
communal life distasteful, had left his herd, waited on the Buddha, ministering
to all his needs. From Pārileyyaka the Buddha went on to
Sāvatthi (Vin.i.352f.;
S.iii.95; Ud.iv.5; J. iii.489; M.i.320).
This was in the tenth year after the Enlightenment (BuA.,
p.3). The Commentaries (E.g., DhA.i.48ff.; iv.26 ff. UdA.250f.; see Thomas, op.
cit., 117 n ) say that the elephant's name was Pārileyya, and describe in vivid
detail the perfect manner in which he looked after the Buddha, omitting nothing,
even to the extent of finding hot water for his bath. There was also there a
monkey who offered the Buddha a honeycomb. Soon after, the monkey fell on a tree
stump and died and was born in Tāvatimsa.
Later, when Ananda came with five
hundred others to invite the Buddha to return to Sāvatthi, Pārileyyaka provided
them all with food. He died of a broken heart when the Buddha left the forest,
and was born in Tāvatimsa in a golden palace, thirty leagues high, where he came
to be known as Pārileyyaka devaputta.
This elephant is identified with the elephant of the
Bhisa
Jātaka. J. iv.314.

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