Buddhism
☸️Dhp157-166

Dhp157-166 — Chapter 12

1

Minor Collection

2

Sayings of the Dhamma 157–166

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12. The Self

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If you knew your self as beloved,

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you’d look after it so well.

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In one of the night’s three watches,

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an astute person would remain alert.

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The astute would avoid being corrupted

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by first grounding themselves

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in what is suitable,

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and then instructing others.

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If one were to treat oneself

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as one instructs another,

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the well-tamed indeed would tame:

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for the self, it seems, is hard to tame.

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One is indeed the lord of oneself,

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for who else would be one’s lord?

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By means of a well-tamed self,

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one gains a lord that’s rare indeed.

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For the evil that is done by oneself,

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born and produced in oneself,

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grinds down a simpleton,

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as diamond grinds a lesser gem.

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One choked by immorality,

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as a sal tree by a creeper,

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does to themselves

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what a foe only wishes.

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It’s easy to do bad things

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harmful to oneself,

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but good things that are helpful

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are the hardest things to do.

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On account of wicked views—

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scorning the guidance

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of the perfected ones,

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the noble ones living righteously—

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the idiot begets their own self’s demise,

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like the bamboo bearing fruit.

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For it is by oneself that evil’s done,

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one is corrupted by oneself.

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It’s by oneself that evil’s not done,

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one is purified by oneself.

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Purity and impurity are personal matters,

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no one can purify another.

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Never neglect what is good for yourself

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for the sake of another, however great.

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Knowing well what is good for yourself,

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be intent upon your heart’s goal.