Jataka 116 Dubbaca
Dubbaca Jataka
Brahmadatta was reigning in Benares, the Bodhisatta was born into an acrobat's family. When he grew up, he was a very wise and clever fellow. From another acrobat he learned the javelin dance, and with his master used to travel about exhibiting his skill. Now this master of his knew the four javelin dance but not the five; but one day when performing in a certain village, he, being in liquor, had five javelins set up in a row and gave out that he would dance through the lot.
Said the Bodhisatta, "You can't manage all five javelins, master. Have one taken away. If you try the five you will be run through by the fifth and die."
"Then you don't know what I can do when I try," said the drunken fellow; and paying no heed to the Bodhisatta's words, he danced through four of the javelins only to impale himself on the fifth like the Bassia flower on its stalk. And there he lay groaning. Said the Bodhisatta, "This calamity comes of your disregarding the counsels of the wise and good", and he uttered this stanza:
Too much thought sore against my will you tried;
Clearing the four, upon the fifth you died.
So saying, he lifted his master from off the javelin point and duly performed the last offices to his body.