The Storyteller Online

Youth
     Storytelling

Stories
< Back to Story Listings

India - The Blind Men and the Elephant   Print Story 

The Blind Men and the Elephant
As retold by Dr. Mike Lockett, The Normal Storyteller

Many years ago in the far away land of India, in a place called Indostan, there lived six blind men.  Though they were blind, they were known to be wise beyond their years.  People came from miles away to talk about their problems and to discuss important issues with the blind men and usually left with the wisdom that they sought.

Though to most people, the men seemed calm and serene, not a day passed without arguements among them, when they were alone, about the wisdom they possessed.  They talked and argued and argued and talked until they all agreed on answers that people sought.

One day in the wee hours of the morning, before the usual crowd of visitors came by, the men were finding their way along a jungle path talking.  As they talked, a loud trampling noise could be heard coming down the path towards them.

One of the wise men said, "I hear an elephant nearby.  We have often talked about these beasts, but we have never agreed about what they are like.  Let us go and touch the creature and debate about who is right and who is wrong."  So each of the men walked along the path until they could sense the elephant nearby.

Elephants can be very dangerous animals.  For when they smell man, they often become upset and fearful.  They have been known to charge at people and trample them to death.  However, having never seen the size and power of an elephant, the blind men walked calmly up to where the animal stood.  It did not move from where it stood until they had all touched it and learned as much as they could about it.

The first blind man was very tall, but as he approached it, he started to fall.  As he fell forward, his hands came to rest on the side of the magnificant animal.  He moved his hands up and down and from side to side until he was absolutely certain what it was like.  He stretched his arms up and felt high, then leaned over and felt lower.  He stretched his hands out to the left and to the right and felt the same hard surface the entire time.  His fingers felt the tough, leathery skin with dried mud clinging to it like pieces of masonry on the sides of a house.  Then satisfied, he began to call, "I've learned the elephant is just like a wall!"

The second blind man also found the elephant.  However, what he found was entirely different.  He was near the front of the elephant, and as he reached out with his hands, the elephant turned his head slightly to watch him, and the blind man's hands came to rest on the elephant's tusk.

The man felt the round, smooth surface of the elephant's ivory tusk.  He stretched out his fingers and tried to wrap them around the surface that he felt.  Near where the tusk began, it was too large to reach totally around with his two hands.  As he moved his hands down the tusk, away from the elephant, his fingers could touch.  He continued to feel until he reached the end of the tusk where it came to a point that was slightly rounded at the tip.  "Goodness me, it's very clear, the elephant is really like a spear." the second blind man said.

The third blind man walked directly into the path where the elephant had been traveling until the men came along.  The man could sense the closeness of the elephant and held his hands out in front of him as he approached it.  His approach aroused the curiosity of the elephant, and it reached out with his trunk to feel the man and see what he was like.  As the man's hands wrapped around the trunk, the elephant moved the trunk from side to side.  It curved around the man's hands, letting the man scratch and massage it's trunk. And before the man backed away, the elephant touched the man on his cheek with the tip of his trunk.  "The only opinion I can make is the elephant is like a snake."

The fourth blind man was somewhat short and happened upon the elephant's leg with his hands.  He touched the elephant's knee and reached around it. His hands found that the leg was round and rough.  He allowed his hands to travel from the knee to where the leg touched the ground.  Then, he moved his hands back up with caution until they branched out where they hit the body.  He shook his head up and down after picturing his image of the elephant. He said, "The answer's really clear to see.  The elephant is like a tree!

The fifth blind man listened to the comments of the others and stood still the entire time - not having touched the animal yet.  As he stood near the elephant, he suddenly felt a bit of wind brush past his face.  He could hear a slight sound of something moving back and forth in front of him and reached up with his hands to find the elephant's ear.  It was thin enough that his forefinger and thumb could almost touch while pinchng it.  Yet, it was large from top to bottom and side to side.  As he continued to try to hold the ear, the elephant whipped it from side to side stirring up a breeze. "I know the answer," said the man.  "The elephant is like a fan."

The sixth blind man had walked clear past the elephant and only managed to find it by hearing the comments of his friends.  As he came up on the back side of the elephant, the animal flicked his tail back and forth until the tail hit the man on the nose.  The man instantly shot his hands forward and grabbed the swinging object that had hit him. It was long and thin, with a tuft of hair at the end. 

And, when the sixth blind man tried to pull the tail he held in his hands, the elephant tooted.  The man made a horrible face when he smelled the air.  The man said, "I know I must sound like a dope, but the elephant is like a smelly rope.

The argument went on for ages.  Each man was certain that he alone knew what an elephant was like.

So it goes with wisdom.  Even the wisest of persons can be partly right and yet be mostly wrong.

Note to Readers:  John Godfrey Saxe wrote the poem "The Blind Man and the Elephant in the 1800's and made it famous.   It is based on Indian and Chinese folktales.  The poem is in the public domain and able to be used freely.  It is interesting to research the poem further and see variations of the story that date back to the Han Dynasty in China from 202 BC - 220 AD.  Check out the following site for more information on the history of this delightful tale:

 http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/blind_men_elephant.html

If you wish to read more of Dr. Lockett's stories, please visit his web site at http://www.mikelockett.com

 



Click on any story to read:
Appalachian Tales
 • Lazy Jack
 • Soap - Soap - Soap
 • The Gunny Wolf
 • The Journeycake Who Ran Away
Ballads/Songs
 • I'm Gonna Tell - R. Sorrels, adapted by M. Lockett
 • Little Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly - performance
 • Little Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly - traditional
 • The Wedding of Jack and Jill
Call and Response Stories
 • Did You Feed My Cow?
 • Farm Vacation
 • The Button Factory
 • The Man Who Saw a Crocodile
 • The Turkey Hunt - Call and Response
Fables
 • Androcles and the Lion
 • The Ant and the Pigeon
 • The Bat and the Weasel
 • The Boy Who Cried Wolf
 • The Cat, the Rooster and the Young Mouse
 • The Dove and the Ant
 • The Farmer and the Stork
 • The Frog in the Milk Pail
 • The Lion and the Buffalos
 • The North Wind and the Sun
 • The Ox and the Frog
 • The Panther and the Villagers
Folk Tales and Folklore
 • Africa - The Lion's Minister of State
 • Africa - The Sly Old Cat
 • America - Full of Bologna
 • America - How Man Became Master of Fire
 • Argentina - Fox's Warm Bargain
 • Asia - The Tiger in the Well
 • Balkans - Why Man Lives Eighty Years
 • Bohemia - Long, Broad and Sharpsight
 • Brazil, How Brazilian Beetles Got Their Coats
 • Caribbean - Anansi and the Python
 • China - Ow and Ouch
 • China - The Chinese Nightingale
 • China - The Magic Pillow
 • China - The Monkey's Drum
 • China - The Terrible Nung Guama
 • China - The Tiger's Teacher
 • Congo - Monkey and Rabbit Together
 • Denmark - The Wonderful Pot
 • England - The Baker's Daughter
 • England - The Cat and the Mouse
 • England - The Cat's Tale
 • England - The Little Gingerbread Boy
 • England - The Little Red Hen
 • England - The Pot that Would Not Walk
 • England - The Three Bears
 • England - The Three Little Pigs
 • England - The Three Sillies
 • Finland - Why Fish Cannot Talk
 • Flanders - How the Finch Got Its Colors
 • France - Half a Blanket
 • Germany - The Frog Prince
 • Germany - The Porridge Pot
 • Germany - Why Beans Have a Split Side
 • Ghana - The Story of the Tongue
 • Ghana - Why Spiders Have Big Rear Ends
 • India - The Blind Men and the Elephant
 • India - The Hare That Ran Away
 • India - The Hare that Ran Away Teller's Notes
 • India - The Jackal and the Alligator
 • India - The Lion Makers
 • India - The Magic of Friendship
 • India - The Monkey and the Crocodile
 • India - The Ox Who Won a Bet
 • India - The Quarreling Quails
 • India - The Tiger, the Brahman and the Jackal
 • India - The Turtle Who Could Not Stop Talking
 • Indonesia - Why There Are No Tigers in Borneo
 • Iran - The Singing Pumpkin
 • Iraq - The Gift of Stories - The Caliph of Bagdad
 • Jamaica - Why Dogs Watch People Eat
 • Japan - The Hare of Inaba
 • Japan - The Two Frogs
 • Korea - The Magic Moneybag
 • Korea - The Pumpkin Seeds
 • Laos - The King Who Hated Old People
 • Latvia - The Hungry Wolf
 • Mexico - How Lizard Beat Big Deer
 • Nigeria - How Rabbit Got Wisdom
 • Norway - How Bear Lost His Tail
 • Norway - The Boy and the North Wind
 • Norway - The Gertrude Bird
 • Norway - The Goats in the Gardern
 • Philippines - Saving the Moon
 • Philippines - Why Male Mosquitoes Do Not Bite
 • Phillipines - The Man with the Cocoanuts
 • Phillppines - The Seven Happy Villagers
 • Phillppines - Why Chickens Scratch the Ground
 • Russia - The Mitten
 • Russia - The Poor Man's Ruble
 • Russia - Two Goats on the Bridge -
 • Scotland - Aiken-Drum
 • Scotland - The Haunted Tailor
 • Senegal - How Moon & Sun Came to Dwell in the Sky
 • Siberia - How the Bee Got His Bumble
 • Siberia - The Girl in the Moon
 • South Africa - The Man and the Snake
 • Spain - Little Half-Chick (Medio Pollito)
 • Sri Lanka - Lizard's Duel with Leopard
 • Surinam - The King of the Birds
 • Sweden - Anders' New Cap
 • Sweden - The Boy and the Water-Sprite
 • Sweden - The Elves & the Shoemaker
 • Syria - The King Who Changed His Ways
 • Taiwan - Flies Who Paid a Debt of Gratitude
 • Taiwan - The Frog in the Well
 • Taiwan - Trapping Rabbits in Taiwan
 • Thailand - Why Elephant Has a Long Nose
 • Tibet - The Candy Man
 • Tibet - The Tiger and the Frog
 • Turkey - The Mouse and the Elephant
 • Turkey - The Three Hares
 • United States - The Cricket's Supper
 • Vietman - How the Tiger Got Its Stripes
 • Vietnam - Raven and the Star Fruit Tree
 • West Africa - How Mankind Got Wisdom
 • West Africa - Why Spiders Hide in Corners
Historical Stories
 • A Leader Lends a Hand
 • Civil War - The Story of Taps
 • Civil War Story - The Fortunate Mistake
 • How Normal Became Normal
 • Nancy Mason and the Baby Fold
 • Private Joe Fifer
 • The Boy and the Book
 • The Gift of Stories - The Caliph of Bagdad
 • Ulysses S. Grant
Holiday Stories
 • A Live Christmas
 • France- The Wooden Shoe Christmas
 • I Heard the Bells of Christmas Day
 • The Christmas Rose
 • The Christmas Truce of 1914
 • The Legend of Babushka
 • The Legend of the Poinsettia
 • The Legend of the Robin
 • The Story of Francis of Assisi
 • The Story of Silent Night
 • The Three Purses
Humor and Short Stories/Jokes
 • Full of Bologna
 • Gettin' the Mule's Attention
 • Horse Sense
 • Pets at the Library
 • The Calling of the Bells
 • The Pig's Brother
 • Why Roses Come in Pink
Math Stories (great for math teachers)
 • Creative Division - Dividing the Geese (Russia)
 • Problem Solving Story - The New Shoes - (China)
Native American Tales
 • Hopi - Grandmother Spider
 • Hopi - Why Clouds Are in the Sky
 • Nez Perce - Why Bear Sleeps All Winter
 • Pueblo - The Musical Waters
 • The Coyote and the Turtle
Religious Stories and Bible Stories
 • Being a Good Neighbor
 • David and Goliath
 • Feathers in the Wind
 • God is Good
 • Joshua and the Battle of Jericho
 • Noah and the Great flood
 • Sword of Gideon
 • The Call of Samuel
 • The Love of Two Brothers
 • The Most Precious Thing
 • The Story of Esther
 • The Story of Rhoda
 • The Story of Ruth
 • Timothy's Head Start to Salvation
Scary Stories (but not too scary)
 • A Halloween Scare
 • Jack and the Goblins
 • Slimy Green Fingers
 • The Haunted Tailor
 • The Squeaky Door
Teacher Materials - Essays on Holiday Topics
 • Christmas Cards Remembered
 • Easter Customs
 • Thoughts on Candy Canes
Workshop Handouts
 • Moved to Articles Section of Website
    Site created by Creative Sites Media © 2005-2011 Heritage Schoolhouse Press.