Dhammapada
The Path of Dhamma
IV. Pupphavagga: Flowers (44-59)
By Thanissaro Bhikkhu.
For free distribution only.
[44] Who will penetrate this earth
and this realm of death
with all its gods?
Who will ferret out
the well-taught Dhamma-saying,
as the skillful flower-arranger
the flower?
[45] The learner-on-the-path
will penetrate this earth
and this realm of death
with all its gods.
The learner-on-the-path
will ferret out
the well-taught Dhamma-saying,
as the skillful flower-arranger
the flower.
[46:] Knowing this body
is like foam,
realizing its nature
-- a mirage --
cutting out
the blossoms of Mara,
you go where the King of Death
can't see.
[47] The man immersed in
gathering blossoms,
his heart distracted:
death sweeps him away --
as a great flood,
a village asleep.
[48] The man immersed in
gathering blossoms,
his heart distracted,
insatiable in sensual pleasures:
the End-Maker holds him
under his sway.
[49] As a bee -- without harming
the blossom,
its color,
its fragrance --
takes its nectar and flies away:
so should the sage
go through a village.
[50] Focus,
not on the rudenesses of others,
not on what they've done
or left undone,
but on what you
have and haven't done
yourself.
[51] Just like a blossom,
bright colored
but scentless:
a well-spoken word
is fruitless
when not carried out.
[52] Just like a blossom,
bright colored
and full of scent:
a well-spoken word
is fruitful
when well carried out.
[53] Just as from a heap of flowers
many garland strands can be made,
even so
one born and mortal
should do
-- with what's born and is mortal --
many a skillful thing.
[54] No flower's scent
goes against the wind --
not sandalwood,
jasmine,
tagara.
But the scent of the good
does go against the wind.
The person of integrity
wafts a scent
in every direction.
[55] Sandalwood, tagara,
lotus, and jasmine:
Among these scents,
the scent of virtue
is unsurpassed.
[56] Next to nothing, this fragrance
-- sandalwood, tagara --
while the scent of the virtuous
wafts to the gods,
supreme.
[57] Those consummate in virtue,
dwelling in heedfulness,
released through right knowing:
Mara can't follow their tracks.
[58-59] As in a pile of rubbish
cast by the side of a highway
a lotus might grow
clean-smelling
pleasing the heart,
so in the midst of the rubbish-like,
people run-of-the-mill and blind,
there dazzles with discernment
the disciple of the Rightly
Self-Awakened One.
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