MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Give up anger, give up conceit,
Pass beyond every fetter.
There is no suffering for one who possesses nothing,
Who doesn’t cling to body-and-mind.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Do not turn anything
Into something longed for,
For then it’s dreadful to lose.
Without longing or dislike,
No bonds exist.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Tasting the flavor
Of solitude and peace,
One becomes free of distress and evil,
Drinking the flavor of Dharma joy.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER FOURTEEN
The Buddha’s victory cannot be undone;
No one in the world can approach it.
By what path would you guide him,
Who has no path,
Whose field is endless?
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Rouse yourself! Don’t be negligent!
Life the Dharma, a life of good conduct.
. . . Do not follow a wrong view;
Don’t be engrossed in the world.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER TWELVE
Evil is done by oneself alone;
By oneself is one defiled.
Evil is avoided by oneself;
By oneself alone is one purified.
Purity and impurity depend on oneself;
No one can purify another.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER ELEVEN
Why the laughter, why the joy,
When flames are ever burning?
Surrounded by darkness,
Shouldn’t you search for the light?
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER TEN
All tremble at violence;
Life is dear for all.
Seeing others as being like yourself,
Do not kill or cause others to kill.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER NINE
Don’t disregard evil, thinking,
“It won’t come back to me!”
With dripping drops of water
Even a water jug is filled.
Little by little,
A fool is filled with evil.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER EIGHT
Better than a thousand meaningless statements
Is one meaningful word,
Which, having been heard,
Brings Peace
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER SEVEN
For someone
At the journey’s end,
Freed from sorrow,
Liberated in all ways,
Released from all bonds,
No Fever exists.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER SIX
Like someone pointing to treasure
Is the wise person
Who sees your faults and points them out.
Associate with such a sage.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER FIVE
Reasoning is harmful
To fools;
It ruins their good fortune
And splits open their heads
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER FOUR
Just as from a heap of flowers
Many garlands can be made,
So, you, with your mortal life,
Should do many skillful things.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER THREE
For those who are unsteady of mind,
Who do not know true Dharma,
And whose serenity wavers,
Wisdom does not mature.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER TWO
Driving away negligence with vigilance,
Ascending the tower of insight and free of sorrow,
A sage observes the sorrowing masses
As someone standing on a mountain observes
fools on the ground below.
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: THE DHAMMAPADA, CHAPTER ONE
Speak or act with a corrupted mind,
And suffering follows
As the wagon wheel follows the hoof of the ox
— Buddha
MEDITATIONS: FOURTH OF THE FOUR BOOKS
Those who follow that part of themselves which is great are great men; those who follow that part which is little are little men.
— Mencius
MEDITATIONS: Third OF THE FOUR BOOKS
If a man in the morning hear the right way, he may die in the evening without regret.
— Confucius
MEDITATIONS: SECOND OF THE FOUR BOOKS
What Heaven has conferred is called THE NATURE; an accordance with this nature is called THE PATH of duty; the regulation of this path is called INSTRUCTION.
— Confucius