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Quotes from Dhammapada
The following are some words of truth quoting from a collection of
Dhammapada, the teaching of the Buddha, that I find it inspiring,
profoundly meaningful and want to share with you. I hope you'll be
joyful and delight in studying the meaning of them.
- All
(mental) states have mind as their forerunner, mind is their chief, and
they are mind-made. If one speaks or acts, with a defiled mind, then
suffering follows one even as the wheel follows the hoof of the
draught-ox. (1)
- All (mental) states have mind as their
forerunner, mind is their chief, and they are mind-made. If one speaks
or acts, with a pure mind, happiness follows one as one’s shadow that
does not leave ones. (2)
- He abused me, he beat me, he
defeated me, he robbed me’: the hatred of those who harbour such
thoughts is not appeased. (3)
- Hatred is never appeased by hatred in this world; it is appeased by love. This is an eternal law. (5)
- Whosoever is energetic, mindful, pure in conduct, discriminating,
self-restrained, right-living, vigilant, his fame steadily increases.
(24)
- By endeavour, diligence, disciplines, and self-mastery,
let the wise man make (of himself) an island that not flood can
overwhelm. (25)
- Fools, men of little intelligence, give
themselves over to negligence, but the wise man protects his diligence
as a supreme treasure. (26)
- Give not yourselves unto
negligence; have not intimacy with sense pleasures. The man who
meditates with diligence attains much happiness. (27)
- This
fickle, unsteady mind, difficult to guard, difficult to control, the
wise man makes straight, as the fletcher the arrow. (33)
- Hard
to restrain, unstable is this mind; it flits whenever it lists. Good it
is to control the mind. A controlled mind brings happiness. (35)
- He whose mind is unsteady, he whose know not the Good Teaching, he
whose confidence wavers, the wisdom of such a person does not attain
fullness. (38)
- Whatever harm a foe may do to a foe, or a
hater to another hater, a wrongly-directed mind may do one harm far
exceeding these. (42)
- Neither mother, not father, not any other relative can do a man such as is wrought by a rightly-directed mind. (43)
- The man who gathers only the flowers (of sense pleasure), whose mind
is entangled, death carries him away as a great flood a sleeping
village. (47)
- One should not pry into the faults of others,
into things done left undone by others. One should rather consider what
by oneself is done and left undone. (50)
- As a beautiful
flower that is full of hue but lacks fragrance, even so fruitless is
the well-spoken word of one who does not practice it. (51)
-
If, as one fares, one does not find a companion who is better or equal,
let one resolutely pursue the solitary course; there can be no
fellowship with the fool. (61)
- ‘I have sons, I have wealth’:
thinking thus the fool is troubled. Indeed, he himself is not his own.
How can sons or wealth be his? (62)
- Even if all his life a
fool associates with a wise man, he will not understand the Truth, even
as the spoon (does not understand) the flavour of the soup. (64)
- That deed is not well done, which one regrets when it is done and the
result of which one experiences weeping with a tearful face. (67)
- The fool thinks an evil deed as sweet as honey, so long as it does
not ripen (does not produce results). But when it ripens, the fool
comes to grief. (69)
- Even as a solid rock is unshaken by the wind, so are the wise unshaken by praise or blame. (81)
- Even as a lack, deep, extremely clear and tranquil, so do the wise become tranquil having heard the Teaching. (82)
- Few among men are they who cross to the further shore. The others merely run up and down the bank on this side. (85)
- For him, who has completed the journey, who is sorrowless, wholly set
free, and rid of all bonds, for such a one there is no burning (of the
passions). (90)
- He whose senses are mastered like horses well
under the charioteer’s control, he who is purged of pride, free from
passions, such a steadfast one even the gods envy (hold dear). (94)
- Calm is the thought, calm the word and deed of him who, rightly
knowing, is wholly freed, perfectly peaceful and equipoised. (96)
- The man who is not credulous, who knows the ‘uncreated’, who has
severed all ties, who has put an end to the occasion (of good and
evil), who has vomited all desires, verily he is supreme among men. (97)
- One may conquer in battle a thousand times a thousand men, yet he is the best of conquerors who conquers himself. (103)
- Better is it truly to conquer oneself than to conquer others. Neither
a god, nor an ‘angel’, nor Mara, nor Brahma could turn into defeat the
victory of a person such as his who is self-mastered and ever
restrained in conduct. (104-105)
- Though one may live a
hundred years with no true insight and self-control, yet better,
indeed, is a life of one day for a man who meditates in wisdom. (111)
- Make haste in doing good; restrain your mind from evil. Whosoever is slow in doing good, his mind delights in evil. (116)
- It is well with the evil-doer until his evil (deed) ripens. But when
his evil (deed) bears fruit, he then sees its ill effects. (119)
- It is ill, perhaps, with the doer of good until his good deed ripens.
But when it bears fruit, then he sees the happy results. (120)
- Do not think lightly of evil, saying: ‘It will not come to me’. Even
a water-pot is filled by the falling of drops. Likewise the fool,
gathering it drop by drop, fills himself with good. (121)
-
Whosoever offends an innocent person, pure and guiltless, his evil
comes back that fool himself like fine dust thrown against the wind.
(125)
- All tremble at weapons; all fear death. Comparing others with oneself, one should not slay, nor cause to slay. (129)
- He who, seeking his own happiness, torments with the rod creatures
that are desirous of happiness, shall not obtain happiness hereafter.
(131)
- The man of little learning (ignorant) grows like a bull; his flesh grows, but not his wisdom. (152)
- Not having lived the Holy Life, not having obtained wealth in their
youth, men pine away like old herons in a lake without fish. (155)
- If a man practices himself what he admonishes other to do, he
himself, being well-controlled, will have control over other. It is
difficult, indeed, to control oneself. (159)
- Oneself is one’s
own protector (refuge); what other protector (refuge) can there be?
With oneself fully controlled, one obtains a protection (refuge) which
is hard to gain. (160)
- By oneself indeed is evil done and by
oneself is one defiled. By oneself is evil left undone and by oneself
indeed is one purified. Purity and impurity depend on oneself. No one
can purify another. (165)
- Do not follow mean things. Do not
dwell in negligence. Do not embrace false views. So the world (i.e
Samsara, the cycle of existence and continuity) is not prolonged. (167)
- Come, behold this world, how it resembles an ornamented royal
chariot, in which fools flounder, but for the wise there is no
attachment to it. (171)
- Better is the gain of Entering the
Stream than sole sovereignty over the earth, than going to heaven, than
rule supreme over entire universe. (178)
- Not to do any evil, to cultivate good, to purify one’s mind, this is the Teaching of the Buddhas. (183)
- The most excellent ascetic practice is patience and forbearance.
‘Nibbana is supreme’, say the Buddhas. He indeed is no recluse who
harms another; nor is he an ascetic who hurts other. (184)
- To speak no ill, to do no harm, ............TO BE CONTINUE
- To speak no ill, to do no harm, to practice restraint according to
the fundamental precepts, to be moderate in eating, to live in
seclusion, to devote oneself to higher consciousness, this is the
Teaching of the Buddhas. (185)
- Happy indeed we live without hate among the hateful. We live free from hatred amidst hateful men. (197)
-
The conqueror begets enmity; the defeated lie down in distress. The
peaceful rest in happiness, giving up both victory and defeat. (201)
-
Health is the best gain; contentment is the best wealth. A trusty
friend is the best kinsman; Nibbana is the supreme bliss. (204)
-
Having tasted of the flavour of solitude and tranquility, one becomes
woeless an stainless, drinking the essence of the joy of Truth. (205)
- From lust arises grief; from lust arises fear. For him who is free from lust there is no grief, much less fear. (215)
-
He who holds back arisen anger as one checks a whirling chariot, him I
call a charioteer; other fold only hold the reins. (222)
- Conquer anger by love, evil by good; conquer the miser with liberality, and the liar with truth. (223)
-
Be on your guard against physical agitation; be controlled in body.
Forsaking bodily misconduct, follow right conduct in body. (231)
- Be on your guard against verbal agitation; be controlled in words. Forsaking wrong speech, follow right ways in word. (232)
-
Be onyour guard against mental agitation; be controlled in thoughts.
Forsaking evil thoughts, follow right ways in thought. (233)
- The wise are controlled in deed, controlled in words, controlled in thoughts, verily, they are fully controlled. (243)
-
By degrees, little by little, from moment to moment, a wise man removes
his own impurities, as a smith removes the dross of silver. (239)
- As rust, arisen out of iron, eats itself away, even so his own deeds lead the transgressor to the states of woe. (240)
-
Know this, O good man, that evil things are uncontrollable. Let not
greed and wickedness drag you to suffering for a long time. (248)
- There is no fire like lust. There is no grip like hate. there is no net like delusion. There is no river like craving. (251)
-
The fault of others is easily seen; but one’s own is hard to see. Like
chaff one winnows other’s faults; but one’s own one conceals as a
crafty fowler disguises himself. (252)
- He who has transcended
both merit (good) and demerit (evil), he who leads a pure life, he who
lives with understanding in this world, he, indeed, is called a
bhikkhu. (267)
- Not by silence does one become a sage (muni) if
one be foolish and untaught. But the wise man who, as if holding a pair
of scales, take what is good and leaves out what is evil, is indeed a
sage. For that reason he is a sage. He who understands both sides in
this world is called a sage. (268/269)
- Of paths the Eightfold
Path is the best; of truths the Four Words (Noble Truths); Detachment
is the best of states and of biped the Seeing One (the Man of Vision).
(273)
- This is the only Way. There is no other for the
purification of Vision. Follow this Way: this is the bewilderment of
Mara (Evil). (274)
- Following this Way you shall make an end of
suffering. This verily is the Way declared by me when I had learnt to
remove the arrow (of suffering). (275)
- You yourself should
make the effort; the Awakened Ones are only teachers. Those who enter
this Path and who are meditative, are delivered from the bonds of Mara
(Evil). (276)
- ‘All conditioned things are impermanent’, when
one sees this in wisdom, then one becomes dispassionate towards the
painful. This is the Path to Purity. (277)
- ‘All conditioned
things are dukkha (III)’, when one sees this in wisdom, then he becomes
dispassionate towards the painful. This the Path of Purity. (278)
-
‘All states (dhamma) are without self’, when one sees this in wisdom,
then he becomes dispassionate towards the painful. This is the Path to
Purity. (279)
- Who strives not when he should strive, who,
thought young and strong, is given to idleness, who is loose in his
purpose and thoughts, and who is lazy—that idler never finds the way to
wisdom. (280)
- Watchful of speech, well restrained in mind, let
him do no evil with the body; let him purify these three ways of
action, and attain the Path made known by the Sages. (281)
- The
craving of the man addicted to careless living grows like a Maluva
creeper. He jumps hither and thither, like a monkey in the forest
looking for fruits. (334)
- Whosoever in this world is overcome by this wretched clinging thirst, this sorrows grow like Birana grass after rain. (335)
-
But whosoever in this world overcomes this wretched craving so
difficult to overcome, his sorrows fall away from him like water-drops
from a lotus (leaf). (336)
- As a tree cut down sprouts fourth
again if its roots remain uninjured and strong, even so when the
propensity so craving is not destroyed, this suffering arises again and
again. (338)
- Led by craving men run this way and that like an
ensnared hare. Therefore let the bhikkhu, who wishes his detachment,
discard craving. (343)
- Free thyself from the past, free
thyself from the future, free thyself from the present. Crossing to the
farther shore of existence, with mind released everywhere, no more
shalt thou come to birth and decay. (348)
- Good is restraint of
the eye. Good is restraint of the ear. Good is restraint of the nose.
Good is restraint of the tongue. (360)
- Good is restraint of
the body. Good is the restraint of speech. Good is restraint of the
mind. Restraint everywhere is good. The bhikkhu restrained en every way
is freed from all suffering. (361)
- He who is controlled in
hand, controlled in foot, controlled in speech, and possessing the
highest control (of mind), delighted within, composed, solitary and
contented, him they call a bhikkhu. (362)
- One should not
despise what one receives, and one should not envy (the gain of)
others. The bhikkhu who envies other does not attain concentration.
(365)
- He who has no attachment whatsoever to Name and Form
(mind and body), and he who does not grieve over what there is not, he
indeed is called a bhikkhu. (367)
- The bhikkhu, who abides in
loving-kindness, who is delighted in the Teaching of the Buddha,
attains the State of Calm, the happiness of stilling the conditioned
things. (368)
- He for whom there exists neither this shore nor
the other, nor both, he who is undistressed and unbound, him I call a
brahman. (385)
- The sun glows by day; the moon shines by night;
in his armour the warrior glows. In meditation shines the Brahman. But
all day and night, shines with radiance the Awakened One. (387)
-
He whose destiny neither the gods nor demigod nor men do know, he who
has destroyed defilements and become worthy, him I call brahman. (420)
-
He who knows former lives, who sees heaven and hell, who has reached
the end of births and attained to super-knowledge, the sage,
accomplished with all accomplishments, him I call a brahman. (423)
-
With an image of liberation as the goal the wise abandon darkness and
cherish light, leave petty security behind and seek freedom from
attachment.
To pursue such release is difficult and rare, yet the
wise will seek it, detaching themselves from obstructions, purifying
heart and mind. (Dhammapada v.87-88)
- Just as family and
friends joyfully welcome home loved ones returned from afar, so their
own good deeds welcome those that have done them as they go from this
life to the next. (Dhammapada v.219-220)
- It is wise to set ourselves right before instructing others. (Dhammapada v.158)
-
A single day lived in awareness of the transient nature of life is of
greater value than a hundred years lived unaware of birth and death.
(Dhammapada v.113)
- As a beautiful flower with a delightful fragrance ,....TO BE CONTINUE
- As a beautiful flower that is full of hue but lacks fragrance, even
so fruitless is the well-spoken word of one who does not practice it.
(51)
- If, as one fares, one does not find a companion who is
better or equal, let one resolutely pursue the solitary course; there
can be no fellowship with the fool. (61)
- ‘I have sons, I have
wealth’: thinking thus the fool is troubled. Indeed, he himself is not
his own. How can sons or wealth be his? (62)
- Even if all his
life a fool associates with a wise man, he will not understand the
Truth, even as the spoon (does not understand) the flavour of the soup.
(64)
- That deed is not well done, which one regrets when it is
done and the result of which one experiences weeping with a tearful
face. (67)
- The fool thinks an evil deed as sweet as honey, so
long as it does not ripen (does not produce results). But when it
ripens, the fool comes to grief. (69)
- Even as a solid rock is unshaken by the wind, so are the wise unshaken by praise or blame. (81)
- Even as a lack, deep, extremely clear and tranquil, so do the wise become tranquil having heard the Teaching. (82)
- Few among men are they who cross to the further shore. The others merely run up and down the bank on this side. (85)
-
For him, who has completed the journey, who is sorrowless, wholly set
free, and rid of all bonds, for such a one there is no burning (of the
passions). (90)
- He whose senses are mastered like horses well
under the charioteer’s control, he who is purged of pride, free from
passions, such a steadfast one even the gods envy (hold dear). (94)
-
Calm is the thought, calm the word and deed of him who, rightly
knowing, is wholly freed, perfectly peaceful and equipoised. (96)
-
The man who is not credulous, who knows the ‘uncreated’, who has
severed all ties, who has put an end to the occasion (of good and
evil), who has vomited all desires, verily he is supreme among men. (97)
- One may conquer in battle a thousand times a thousand men, yet he is the best of conquerors who conquers himself. (103)
-
Better is it truly to conquer oneself than to conquer others. Neither a
god, nor an ‘angel’, nor Mara, nor Brahma could turn into defeat the
victory of a person such as his who is self-mastered and ever
restrained in conduct. (104-105)
- Though one may live a hundred
years with no true insight and self-control, yet better, indeed, is a
life of one day for a man who meditates in wisdom. (111)
- Make haste in doing good; restrain your mind from evil. Whosoever is slow in doing good, his mind delights in evil. (116)
-
It is well with the evil-doer until his evil (deed) ripens. But when
his evil (deed) bears fruit, he then sees its ill effects. (119)
-
It is ill, perhaps, with the doer of good until his good deed ripens.
But when it bears fruit, then he sees the happy results. (120)
-
Do not think lightly of evil, saying: ‘It will not come to me’. Even a
water-pot is filled by the falling of drops. Likewise the fool,
gathering it drop by drop, fills himself with good. (121)
-
Whosoever offends an innocent person, pure and guiltless, his evil
comes back that fool himself like fine dust thrown against the wind.
(125)
- All tremble at weapons; all fear death. Comparing others with oneself, one should not slay, nor cause to slay. (129)
-
He who, seeking his own happiness, torments with the rod creatures that
are desirous of happiness, shall not obtain happiness hereafter. (131)
- The man of little learning (ignorant) grows like a bull; his flesh grows, but not his wisdom. (152)
-
Not having lived the Holy Life, not having obtained wealth in their
youth, men pine away like old herons in a lake without fish. (155)
-
If a man practices himself what he admonishes other to do, he himself,
being well-controlled, will have control over other. It is difficult,
indeed, to control oneself. (159)
- Oneself is one’s own
protector (refuge); what other protector (refuge) can there be? With
oneself fully controlled, one obtains a protection (refuge) which is
hard to gain. (160)
- By oneself indeed is evil done and by
oneself is one defiled. By oneself is evil left undone and by oneself
indeed is one purified. Purity and impurity depend on oneself. No one
can purify another. (165)
- Do not follow mean things. Do not
dwell in negligence. Do not embrace false views. So the world (i.e
Samsara, the cycle of existence and continuity) is not prolonged. (167)
-
Come, behold this world, how it resembles an ornamented royal chariot,
in which fools flounder, but for the wise there is no attachment to it.
(171)
- Better is the gain of Entering the Stream than sole
sovereignty over the earth, than going to heaven, than rule supreme
over entire universe. (178)
- Not to do any evil, to cultivate good, to purify one’s mind, this is the Teaching of the Buddhas. (183)
-
The most excellent ascetic practice is patience and forbearance.
‘Nibbana is supreme’, say the Buddhas. He indeed is no recluse who
harms another; nor is he an ascetic who hurts other. (184)
- To
speak no ill, to do no harm, to practice restraint according to the
fundamental precepts, to be moderate in eating, to live in seclusion,
to devote oneself to higher consciousness, this is the Teaching of the
Buddhas. (185)
- Happy indeed we live without hate among the hateful. We live free from hatred amidst hateful men. (197)
-
The conqueror begets enmity; the defeated lie down in distress. The
peaceful rest in happiness, giving up both victory and defeat. (201)
-
Health is the best gain; contentment is the best wealth. A trusty
friend is the best kinsman; Nibbana is the supreme bliss. (204)
-
Having tasted of the flavour of solitude and tranquility, one becomes
woeless an stainless, drinking the essence of the joy of Truth. (205)
- From lust arises grief; from lust arises fear. For him who is free from lust there is no grief, much less fear. (215)
-
He who holds back arisen anger as one checks a whirling chariot, him I
call a charioteer; other fold only hold the reins. (222)
- Conquer anger by love, evil by good; conquer the miser with liberality, and the liar with truth. (223)
-
Be on your guard against physical agitation; be controlled in body.
Forsaking bodily misconduct, follow right conduct in body. (231)
- Be on your guard against verbal agitation; be controlled in words. Forsaking wrong speech, follow right ways in word. (232)
-
Be onyour guard against mental agitation; be controlled in thoughts.
Forsaking evil thoughts, follow right ways in thought. (233)
- The wise are controlled in deed, controlled in words, controlled in thoughts, verily, they are fully controlled. (243)
-
By degrees, little by little, from moment to moment, a wise man removes
his own impurities, as a smith removes the dross of silver. (239)
- As rust, arisen out of iron, eats itself away, even so his own deeds lead the transgressor to the states of woe. (240)
-
Know this, O good man, that evil things are uncontrollable. Let not
greed and wickedness drag you to suffering for a long time. (248)
- There is no fire like lust. There is no grip like hate. there is no net like delusion. There is no river like craving. (251)
-
The fault of others is easily seen; but one’s own is hard to see. Like
chaff one winnows other’s faults; but one’s own one conceals as a
crafty fowler disguises himself. (252)
- He who has transcended
both merit (good) and demerit (evil), he who leads a pure life, he who
lives with understanding in this world, he, indeed, is called a
bhikkhu. (267)
- Not by silence does one become a sage (muni) if
one be foolish and untaught. But the wise man who, as if holding a pair
of scales, take what is good and leaves out what is evil, is indeed a
sage. For that reason he is a sage. He who understands both sides in
this world is called a sage. (268/269)
...TO BE CONTINUE
- Of paths the Eightfold Path is the best; of truths the Four Words
(Noble Truths); Detachment is the best of states and of biped the
Seeing One (the Man of Vision). (273)
- This is the only Way.
There is no other for the purification of Vision. Follow this Way: this
is the bewilderment of Mara (Evil). (274)
- Following this Way
you shall make an end of suffering. This verily is the Way declared by
me when I had learnt to remove the arrow (of suffering). (275)
-
You yourself should make the effort; the Awakened Ones are only
teachers. Those who enter this Path and who are meditative, are
delivered from the bonds of Mara (Evil). (276)
- ‘All
conditioned things are impermanent’, when one sees this in wisdom, then
one becomes dispassionate towards the painful. This is the Path to
Purity. (277)
- ‘All conditioned things are dukkha (III)’, when
one sees this in wisdom, then he becomes dispassionate towards the
painful. This the Path of Purity. (278)
- ‘All states (dhamma)
are without self’, when one sees this in wisdom, then he becomes
dispassionate towards the painful. This is the Path to Purity. (279)
-
Who strives not when he should strive, who, thought young and strong,
is given to idleness, who is loose in his purpose and thoughts, and who
is lazy—that idler never finds the way to wisdom. (280)
-
Watchful of speech, well restrained in mind, let him do no evil with
the body; let him purify these three ways of action, and attain the
Path made known by the Sages. (281)
- The craving of the man
addicted to careless living grows like a Maluva creeper. He jumps
hither and thither, like a monkey in the forest looking for fruits.
(334)
- Whosoever in this world is overcome by this wretched clinging thirst, this sorrows grow like Birana grass after rain. (335)
-
But whosoever in this world overcomes this wretched craving so
difficult to overcome, his sorrows fall away from him like water-drops
from a lotus (leaf). (336)
- As a tree cut down sprouts fourth
again if its roots remain uninjured and strong, even so when the
propensity so craving is not destroyed, this suffering arises again and
again. (338)
- Led by craving men run this way and that like an
ensnared hare. Therefore let the bhikkhu, who wishes his detachment,
discard craving. (343)
- Free thyself from the past, free
thyself from the future, free thyself from the present. Crossing to the
farther shore of existence, with mind released everywhere, no more
shalt thou come to birth and decay. (348)
- Good is restraint of
the eye. Good is restraint of the ear. Good is restraint of the nose.
Good is restraint of the tongue. (360)
- Good is restraint of
the body. Good is the restraint of speech. Good is restraint of the
mind. Restraint everywhere is good. The bhikkhu restrained en every way
is freed from all suffering. (361)
- He who is controlled in
hand, controlled in foot, controlled in speech, and possessing the
highest control (of mind), delighted within, composed, solitary and
contented, him they call a bhikkhu. (362)
- One should not
despise what one receives, and one should not envy (the gain of)
others. The bhikkhu who envies other does not attain concentration.
(365)
- He who has no attachment whatsoever to Name and Form
(mind and body), and he who does not grieve over what there is not, he
indeed is called a bhikkhu. (367)
- The bhikkhu, who abides in
loving-kindness, who is delighted in the Teaching of the Buddha,
attains the State of Calm, the happiness of stilling the conditioned
things. (368)
- He for whom there exists neither this shore nor
the other, nor both, he who is undistressed and unbound, him I call a
brahman. (385)
- The sun glows by day; the moon shines by night;
in his armour the warrior glows. In meditation shines the Brahman. But
all day and night, shines with radiance the Awakened One. (387)
-
He whose destiny neither the gods nor demigod nor men do know, he who
has destroyed defilements and become worthy, him I call brahman. (420)
-
He who knows former lives, who sees heaven and hell, who has reached
the end of births and attained to super-knowledge, the sage,
accomplished with all accomplishments, him I call a brahman. (423)
-
With an image of liberation as the goal the wise abandon darkness and
cherish light, leave petty security behind and seek freedom from
attachment.
To pursue such release is difficult and rare, yet the
wise will seek it, detaching themselves from obstructions, purifying
heart and mind. (Dhammapada v.87-88)
- Just as family and
friends joyfully welcome home loved ones returned from afar, so their
own good deeds welcome those that have done them as they go from this
life to the next. (Dhammapada v.219-220)
- It is wise to set ourselves right before instructing others. (Dhammapada v.158)
-
A single day lived in awareness of the transient nature of life is of
greater value than a hundred years lived unaware of birth and death.
(Dhammapada v.113)
- As a beautiful flower with a delightful
fragrance is pleasing so is wise and lovely speech when matched with
right action. (Dhammapada v.52)
-Having performed a wholesome act it is good to repeat it.
Enjoy the pleasure of its memory.
The fruit of goodness is contentment. (Dhammapada v.118)
-
Even those who live wholesome lives can experience suffering so long as
their acts have not yet borne direct fruits. However, when the fruits
of their actions ripen the joyful consequences cannot be avoided.
(Dhammapada v.120)
- Be careful what you say, restrained in what you
think, and impeccable in how you act. Purifying these three aspects
will take you along the way of the sages. (Dhammapada v.281)
- As water falls from a lotus leaf so sorrow drops from those who are free of toxic craving. (Dhammapada v.336)
-
Self mastery is the supreme victory – much more to be valued than
winning control over others. It is a victory that no other being
whatsoever can distort or take away. (Dhammapada v.104-105)
- Disciples of the Buddha are fully awake both day and night taking delight in compassion. (Dhammapada v.300)
- Let go of the past.
Let go of the future.
Let go of the present.
With a heart that is free cross over to that shore which is beyond suffering. (Dhammapada v.348)