Dhp XIV
      Buddhavagga
      Awakened
      Translated from the Pali by
      Thanissaro Bhikkhu
            Alternate translation:BuddharakkhitaThanissaro
      PTS: Dhp 179-196
      Source: Transcribed from a file provided by the translator.
      Copyright © 1997 Thanissaro Bhikkhu.
      Access to Insight edition © 1997
      For free distribution. This work may be republished, reformatted, 
      reprinted, and redistributed in any medium. It is the author's wish, 
      however, that any such republication and redistribution be made available 
      to the public on a free and unrestricted basis and that translations and 
      other derivative works be clearly marked as such. 
179-180
Whose conquest can't be undone,
whose conquest no one in the world
 can reach;
awakened, his pasture endless,
 pathless:
by what path will you lead him astray?
In whom there's no craving
 — the sticky ensnarer —
to lead him anywherever at all;
awakened, his pasture endless,
 pathless:
by what path will you lead him astray?
181
They, the enlightened, intent on jhana,
delighting in stilling
& renunciation,
self-awakened & mindful:
 even the devas
 view them with envy.
182
Hard    the winning of a human birth.
Hard    the life of mortals.
Hard    the chance to hear the true Dhamma.
Hard    the arising of Awakened Ones.
183-185
The non-doing   of any evil,
the performance     of what's skillful,
the cleansing   of one's own mind:
 this is the teaching
 of the Awakened.
 
Patient endurance:
 the foremost austerity.
Unbinding:
 the foremost,
 so say the Awakened.
He who injures another
is no contemplative.
He who mistreats another,
 no monk.
Not disparaging, not injuring,
restraint   in line with the Patimokkha,
moderation  in food,
dwelling        in seclusion,
commitment  to the heightened mind:
 this is the teaching
 of the Awakened.
186-187
Not even if it rained gold coins
would we have our fill
of sensual pleasures.
 'Stressful,
 they give little enjoyment' —
knowing this, the wise one
 finds no delight
even in heavenly sensual pleasures.
He is one who delights
 in the ending of craving,
 a disciple of the Rightly
 Self-Awakened One.
188-192
They go to many a refuge,
 to mountains and forests,
 to park and tree shrines:
people threatened with danger.
That's not the secure refuge,
 not the supreme refuge,
that's not the refuge,
having gone to which,
 you gain release
 from all suffering & stress.
But when, having gone
to the Buddha, Dhamma,
& Sangha for refuge,
you see with right discernment
the four noble truths —
                    stress,
        the cause of stress,
 the transcending of stress,
& the noble eightfold path,
 the way to the stilling of stress:
that's the secure refuge,
that, the supreme refuge,
that is the refuge,
having gone to which,
 you gain release
 from all suffering & stress.
193
It's hard to come by
 a thoroughbred of a man.
It's simply not true
 that he's born everywhere.
Wherever he's born, an enlightened one,
the family prospers,
    is happy.
194
A blessing:     the arising of Awakened Ones.
A blessing:     the teaching of true Dhamma.
A blessing:     the concord of the Sangha.
The austerity of those in concord
    is a blessing.
195-196
If you worship those worthy of worship,
 — Awakened Ones or their disciples —
who've transcended
 complications,
 lamentation,
 & grief,
who are unendangered,
 fearless,
 unbound:
there's no measure for reckoning
that your merit's 'this much.'
 
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