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☸️Dhp129-145

Dhp129-145 β€” Chapter 4

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Minor Collection

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Sayings of the Dhamma 129–145

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10. The Rod

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All tremble at the rod,

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all fear death.

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Treating others like oneself,

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neither kill nor incite to kill.

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All tremble at the rod,

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all love life.

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Treating others like oneself,

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neither kill nor incite to kill.

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Creatures love happiness,

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so if you harm them with a stick

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in search of your own happiness,

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after death you won’t find happiness.

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Creatures love happiness,

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so if you don’t harm them with a stick

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in search of your own happiness,

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after death you will find happiness.

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Don’t speak harshly,

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they may speak harshly back.

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For aggressive speech is painful,

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and the rod may spring back on you.

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If you still yourself

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like a broken gong,

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you reach extinguishment

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and know no conflict.

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As a cowherd drives the cows

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to pasture with the rod,

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so too old age and death

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drive life from living beings.

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The fool does not understand

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the evil that they do.

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But because of those deeds, that simpleton

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is tormented as if burnt by fire.

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One who violently attacks

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the peaceful and the innocent

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swiftly falls

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to one of ten bad states:

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harsh pain; loss;

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the breakup of the body;

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serious illness;

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mental distress;

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hazards from rulers;

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vicious slander;

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loss of kin;

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destruction of wealth;

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or else their home

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is consumed by fire.

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When their body breaks up, that witless person

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is reborn in hell.

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Not nudity, nor matted hair, nor mud,

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nor fasting, nor lying on bare ground,

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nor wearing dust and dirt, or squatting on the heels,

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will cleanse a mortal not free of doubt.

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Dressed up they may be, but if they live wellβ€”

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peaceful, tamed, committed to the spiritual path,

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having laid aside violence towards all creaturesβ€”

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they are a brahmin, an ascetic, a mendicant.

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Can a person constrained by conscience

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be found in the world?

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Who shies away from blame,

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like a fine horse from the whip?

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Like a fine horse under the whip,

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be keen and full of urgency.

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With faith, ethics, and energy,

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immersion, and investigation of principles,

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accomplished in knowledge and conduct, mindful,

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give up this vast suffering.

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While irrigators guide water,

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fletchers shape arrows,

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and carpenters carve timberβ€”

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those true to their vows tame themselves.

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