07 - Arahants

20/03/201414:09(Xem: 4013)
07 - Arahants

Khuddaka Nikaya
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Dhammapada

A Translation

Translated from the Pali

by Thanissaro Bhikkhu(Geoffrey DeGraff)

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Dhammapada VII

Arahants


90:

In one who
has gone the full distance,
is free from sorrow,
is fully released
in all respects,
has abandoned all bonds:
no fever is found.

91:

The mindful keep active,
don't delight in settling back.
They renounce every home,
every home,
like swans taking off from a lake.

92-93*:

Not hoarding,
having understood food,
their pasture -- emptiness
& freedom without sign:
their trail,
like that of birds through space,
can't be traced.
Effluents ended,
independent of nutriment,
their pasture -- emptiness
& freedom without sign:
their trail,
like that of birds through space,
can't be traced.

94-96*:

He whose senses are steadied
like stallions
well-trained by the charioteer,
his conceit abandoned,
free of effluent,
Such:
even devas adore him.

Like the earth, he doesn't react --
cultured,
Such,
like Indra's pillar,
like a lake free of mud.
For him
-- Such --
there's no traveling on.

Calm is his mind,
calm his speech
& his deed:
one who's released through right knowing,
pacified,
Such.

97*:

The man
faithless / beyond conviction
ungrateful / knowing the Unmade
a burglar / who has severed connections
who's destroyed
his chances / conditions
who eats vomit: / has disgorged expectations:
the ultimate person.

98:

In village or wilds,
valley, plateau:
that place is delightful
where arahants dwell.

99:

Delightful wilds
where the crowds don't delight,
those free from passion
delight,
for they're not searching
for sensual pleasures.

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19/10/2010(Xem: 3238)
The Tipitaka (Pali ti, "three," + pitaka, "baskets"), or Pali Canon, is the collection of primary Pali language texts which form the doctrinal foundation of Theravada Buddhism. Together with the ancient commentaries, they constitute the complete body of classical Theravada texts. The Pali Canon is a vast body of literature: in English translation the texts add up to several thousand printed pages. Most (but not all) of the Canon has already been published in English over the years. Although only a small fraction of these texts are available on this website, this collection can be a good place to start.