264. Not by tonsure does an undisciplined man who speaks falsehood become a Samana; can a man be a Samana who is still held captive by desire and greediness?
265. He who always quiets the evil, whether small or large, he is called a Samana (a quiet man), because he has quieted all evil.
[265. This is a curious etymology, because it shows that at the time when this verse was written, the original meaning of sramana had been forgotten. Sramana meant originally, in the language br the Brahmans, a man who performed hard penances, from sram, ‘to work hard,’ &c. When it became the name of the Buddhist ascetics, the language had changed, and sramana was pronounced samana. Now there is another Sanskrit root, sam, ‘to quiet,’ which in Pâli becomes likewise sam, and from this root sam, ‘to quiet,’ and not from sram, ‘to tire,’ did the popular etymology of the day and the writer of our verse derive the title of the Buddhist priests.
DHAMMAPADA, Chapter 19. The Just