ual enlightenment.Water, although it could be momentarily and partially arrested, is impossible to confine. Just like young Shakyamuni, it cannot be held captive, it cannot be kept from going to places. It will eventually claim its space and demand its freedom:The monarch, reflecting that the prince must see nothing untoward that might agitate his mind, assigned him a dwelling in the upper storeys of the palace and did not allow him to access the ground. . . . The hearing of the entrancing character of the city groves, beloved of the womenfolk, he set his heart on an expedition outside, like an elephant confined inside a house. (550)As water moves away from the mountains, the prince begins his journey that will ultimately lead him away from the palace and propel him towards discovering the world for himself. With each excursion his curiosity grows and each time be becomes more and more compelled to learn about the real world and to make a difference. The quote states, "The knowing are diligent; the humane are quiet."(611) Prince Shakyamuni perfectly mirrors the transition between quietness and diligence as knowledge about the real world penetrates his boundaries:Then the prince returned to the same palace, but so lost in anxiety that is seemed to him empty. But even there he found no relief, as he ever dwelt on the subject of old age; therefore once more with the permission of the king he went out(553) Although the things he learns about the real world do not strike him positively, learning itself inevitably induces a craving to learn more, which, ironically enough diminishes his understanding of the world: Therefore, charioteer, let our chariot be turned back; for it is not the time or place for pleasure-resorts. For how could a man of intelligence be heedless here in the hour of calamity, when once he knows of destruction? (554)Knowing and learning place him in a state of chaos, and only leave him with more questions. He becomes...