Theragatha X

20/03/201414:55(Xem: 3981)
Theragatha X

Khuddaka Nikaya
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Theragatha

Verses of the Elder Monks

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Theragatha X

(Selected suttas)

Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.


X.5 -- Kappa 

Full of the many clans of impurities,
the great manufacturer of excrement,
like a stagnant pool,
a great tumor,
great wound,
full of blood & lymph,
immersed in a cesspool,
trickling liquids, the body
is oozing foulness -- always.
Bound together with sixty sinews,
plastered with a stucco of muscle,
wrapped in a jacket of skin,
this foul body is of no worth at all.
Linked together with a chain of bones,
stitched together with tendon-threads,
it produces its various postures,
from being hitched up together.
Headed surely to death,
in the presence of the King of Mortality,
the man who learns to discard it right here,
goes wherever he wants.

Covered with ignorance,
the body's tied down with a four-fold tie,[1]
sunk in the floods,[2]
caught in the net of latencies,[3]
conjoined with five hindrances,[4]
given over to thought,
accompanied with the root of craving,
roofed with delusion's roofing.
That's how the body functions,
compelled by the compulsion of kamma,
but its attainment ends
in ruin.
Its many becomings go
to ruin.

These who hold to this body as mine
-- blind fools, people run-of-the-mill --
fill the horrific cemetery,
taking on further becoming.
Those who stay uninvolved with this body
-- as they would with a serpent
smeared with dung --
disgorging the root of becoming,[5]
from lack of effluent,
will be totally Unbound.


Notes

1.The four-fold tie: greed, ill will, attachment to precepts & practice, and dogmatic obsession with views. [Go back]

2.Floods: passion for sensuality, becoming, views, and ignorance. [Go back]

3.Latencies: pride, ignorance, lust, aversion, uncertainty, delusion, and craving for becoming. [Go back]

4.Hindrances: sensual desire, ill will, sloth & drowsiness, restlessness & anxiety, and uncertainty. [Go back]

5.The root of becoming: craving. [Go back]

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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.