Dandavagga

Tipitaka » Sutta Pitaka » Khuddaka Nikaya » Dhammapada

PTS: Dhp 129-145

Source: Adapted from the original translation by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.

Dandavagga: Violence
129.	All tremble at the rod, all are fearful of death. Drawing the parallel to	yourself, neither kill nor get others to kill.

130.	All tremble at the rod, all hold their life dear. Drawing the parallel to	yourself, neither kill nor get others to kill.

131. Whoever takes a rod to harm living beings desiring ease, when he himself is looking for ease, will meet with no ease after death.

132. Whoever doesn't take a rod to harm living beings desiring ease, when he himself is looking for ease, will meet with ease after death.

133. Speak harshly to no one, or the words will be thrown right back at you. Contentious talk is painful, for you get struck by rods in return.

134. If, like a flattened metal pot you don't resound, you've attained an Unbinding; in you there's found no contention.

135. As a cowherd with a rod drives cows to the field, so aging & death drive the life of living beings.

136. When doing evil deeds, the fool is oblivious. The dullard is tormented by his own deeds, as if burned by a fire.

137.-139.	Whoever, with a rod, harasses an innocent man, unarmed, quickly falls into any of ten things: harsh pains, devastation, a broken body, grave illness, mental derangement, trouble with the government, violent slander, relatives lost, property dissolved, houses burned down.

140.	At the break-up of the body this one with no discernment, reappears in hell.

141. Neither nakedness nor matted hair nor mud nor the refusal of food nor sleeping on the bare ground nor dust & dirt nor squatting austerities cleanses the mortal who's not gone beyond doubt.

142. If, though adorned, one lives in tune with the chaste life — calmed, tamed, & assured — having put down the rod toward all beings, he's a contemplative a brahman a monk.

143. Who in the world is a man constrained by conscience, who awakens        to censure like a fine stallion   to the whip?

144. Like a fine stallion struck with a whip, be ardent & chastened. Through conviction virtue, persistence, concentration, judgment, consummate in knowledge & conduct, mindful, you'll abandon this not-insignificant pain.

145. Irrigators guide   the water. Fletchers shape    the arrow shaft. Carpenters shape   the wood. Those of good practices control themselves.

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Copyright © 1997 Thanissaro Bhikkhu.

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