Theragatha
Chapter VI — The Sixes
214
Māluṅkyaputta
Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.
For free distribution only.
When a person lives heedlessly,
his craving grows like a creeping vine.
He runs now here
and now there,
as if looking for fruit:
a monkey in the forest.
If this sticky, uncouth craving
overcomes you in the world,
your sorrows grow like wild grass
after rain.
If, in the world, you overcome
this uncouth craving, hard to escape,
sorrows roll off you,
like water beads off
a lotus.
To all of you gathered here
I say:
Good fortune.
Dig up craving
—as when seeking medicinal roots, wild grass—
by the root.
Don’t let Māra cut you down
—as a raging river, a reed—
over and over again.[1]
Do what the Buddha says.
Don’t let the moment pass by.
Those for whom the moment is past
grieve, consigned to hell.[2]
Heedlessness is dust.
Dust follows on heedlessness.
Through heedfulness, knowledge,
pull out
your own arrow
on your own.
[1] The verses up to this point = Dhp 334–337.
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