Buddhism
☸️Dhp60-75

Dhp60-75 — Chapter 6

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Minor Collection

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Sayings of the Dhamma 60–75

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5. The Fool

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Long is the night for the wakeful;

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long is the league for the weary;

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long transmigrate the fools

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who don’t understand the true teaching.

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If while wandering you find no partner

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equal or better than yourself,

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then firmly resolve to wander alone—

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there’s no fellowship with fools.

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“Sons are mine, wealth is mine”—

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thus the fool frets.

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For even your self is not your own,

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let alone your sons or wealth.

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The fool who thinks they’re a fool

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is wise at least to that extent.

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But the true fool is said to be one

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who imagines that they are wise.

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Though a fool attends to the wise

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even for the rest of their life,

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they still don’t understand the teaching,

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like a spoon the taste of the soup.

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If a clever person attends to the wise

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even just for an hour or so,

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they swiftly understand the teaching,

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like a tongue the taste of the soup.

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Fools and simpletons behave

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like their own worst enemies,

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doing wicked deeds

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that ripen as bitter fruit.

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It’s not good to do a deed

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that plagues you later on,

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for which you weep and wail,

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as its effect stays with you.

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It is good to do a deed

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that doesn’t plague you later on,

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that gladdens and cheers,

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as its effect stays with you.

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The fool imagines that evil is sweet,

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so long as it has not yet ripened.

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But as soon as that evil ripens,

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they fall into suffering.

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Month after month a fool may eat

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food from a grass-blade’s tip;

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but they’ll never be worth a sixteenth part

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of one who has appraised the teaching.

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For a wicked deed that has been done

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does not curdle quickly like milk.

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Smoldering, it follows the fool,

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like a fire smothered over with ash.

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Whatever fame a fool may get,

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it only gives rise to harm.

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Whatever good features they have it ruins,

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and blows their head into bits.

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They’d seek the esteem that they lack,

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and status among the mendicants;

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authority over monasteries,

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and honor among other families.

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“Let both layfolk and renunciants think

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the work was done by me alone.

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In anything at all that’s to be done,

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let them fall under my sway alone.”

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So thinks the fool,

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their greed and pride only growing.

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For the means to profit and the path to quenching

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are two quite different things.

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A mendicant disciple of the Buddha,

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understanding what this really means,

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would never delight in honors,

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but rather would foster seclusion.