Buddhism
☸️Dhp383-423

Dhp383-423 — Chapter 11

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Minor Collection

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Sayings of the Dhamma 383–423

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26. Brahmins

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Cut the stream, striving!

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Cast aside sensual pleasures, brahmin.

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Knowing the ending of conditions,

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know the uncreated, brahmin.

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When a brahmin has gone beyond

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dualistic phenomena,

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then they consciously

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make an end of all fetters.

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One for whom there is no crossing over

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or crossing back, or crossing over and back;

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stress-free, detached,

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Absorbed, rid of hopes,

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their task completed, without defilements,

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arrived at the highest goal:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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The sun blazes by day,

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the moon radiates at night,

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the aristocrat shines in armor,

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and the brahmin shines in absorption.

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But all day and all night,

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the Buddha blazes with glory.

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A brahmin’s so-called since they’ve banished evil,

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an ascetic’s so-called since they live a serene life.

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One who has renounced all stains

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is said to be a “renunciant”.

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One should never strike a brahmin,

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nor should a brahmin retaliate.

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Woe to the one who hurts a brahmin,

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and woe for the one who retaliates.

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Nothing is better for a brahmin

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than to hold their mind back from attachment.

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From wherever a cruel wish recoils,

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right there suffering subsides.

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Who does nothing wrong

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by body, speech or mind,

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restrained in these three respects,

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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You should graciously honor

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the one from whom you learn the Dhamma

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taught by the awakened Buddha,

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as a brahmin honors the sacred flame.

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Not by matted hair or family,

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or birth is one a brahmin.

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Those who are truthful and principled:

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they are pure, they are brahmins.

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Why the matted hair, you simpleton,

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and why the skin of deer?

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The tangle is inside you,

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yet you polish up your outsides.

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A personage who wears robes of rags,

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lean, their limbs showing veins,

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meditating alone in the forest,

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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I don’t call someone a brahmin

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after the mother’s womb they’re born from.

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If they still have attachments,

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they’re just someone who says “worthy”.

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Having nothing, taking nothing:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Having cut off all fetters

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they have no anxiety.

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They’ve slipped their chains and are detached:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve cut the strap and harness,

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the halter and bridle too,

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with cross-bar lifted, they’re awakened:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Abuse, killing, caging:

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they withstand these without anger.

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Patience is their powerful army:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Not irritable or pretentious,

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dutiful in precepts and observances,

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tamed, bearing their final body:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Like water from a lotus leaf,

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like a mustard seed off a pin-point,

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sensual pleasures slip off them:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They understand for themselves

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the end of suffering in this life;

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with burden put down, detached:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Deep in wisdom, intelligent,

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expert in the path and what is not the path;

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arrived at the highest goal:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Mixing with neither

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householders nor the homeless;

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a migrant with no bastion, few in wishes:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve laid aside violence

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against creatures firm and frail;

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not killing or making others kill:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Not fighting among those who fight,

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quenched among those who have taken up arms,

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not grasping among those who grasp:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve discarded greed and hate,

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along with conceit and contempt,

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like a mustard seed off the point of a pin:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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The words they utter

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are polished, informative, and true,

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and don’t offend anyone:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They don’t steal anything in the world,

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long or short,

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fine or coarse, beautiful or ugly:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They have no hope

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in this world or the next;

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with no need for hope, detached:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They have no clinging,

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knowledge has freed them of indecision,

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they’ve arrived at the objective, freedom from death:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve escaped clinging

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to both good and bad deeds;

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sorrowless, stainless, pure:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Pure as the spotless moon,

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clear and undisturbed,

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they’ve ended relish for rebirth:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve got past this grueling swamp

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of delusion, transmigration.

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Meditating in stillness, free of indecision,

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they have crossed over to the far shore.

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They’re quenched by not grasping:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve given up sensual stimulations,

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and have gone forth from lay life;

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they’ve ended rebirth in the sensual realm:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve given up craving,

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and have gone forth from lay life;

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they’ve ended craving to be reborn:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve given up craving,

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and have gone forth from lay life;

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they’ve ended craving to be reborn:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They’ve thrown off the human yoke,

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and slipped out of the heavenly yoke;

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unyoked from all yokes:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Giving up desire and discontent,

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they’re cooled and free of attachments;

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a hero, master of the whole world:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They know the passing away

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and rebirth of all beings;

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unattached, holy, awakened:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Gods, centaurs, and humans

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don’t know their destiny;

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the perfected ones with defilements ended:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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They have nothing before or after,

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or even in between.

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Having nothing, taking nothing:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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Captain of the herd, excellent hero,

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great seer and victor;

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unstirred, washed, awakened:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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One who knows their past lives,

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sees heaven and places of loss,

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and has attained the end of rebirth;

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a sage of perfect insight

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at the summit of spiritual perfection:

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that’s who I declare a brahmin.

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The Sayings of the Dhamma are completed.

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