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Previous Chapter 9. The Chapter on Evil

10.

The Chapter on Violence

129.

All tremble at the stick, all fear Death;

Having made oneself the comparison, one should neither strike nor cause to strike.

130.

All tremble at the stick, life is dear to all;

Having made oneself the comparison, one should neither strike nor cause to strike.

131.

Whoever hurts with a stick beings longing for happiness;

Seeking happiness for oneself, after death he does not obtain happiness.

132.

Whoever does not hurt with a stick beings longing for happiness;

Seeking happiness for oneself, after death he obtains happiness.

133.

Do not speak harshly to anyone, those spoken to would retort to you;

For vehement talk is painful, retribution would touch you.

134.

If you do not shake yourself, like a broken gong;

You have attained Nibbāna, no impetuosity is found in you.

135.

Just as a cowherd with a stick drives cattle to pasture;

Thus ageing and death drive away the life of living beings.

136.

Then the fool, doing evil actions, does not understand;

The imprudent one, by his own actions, is tormented as if burnt by fire.

137.

Whoever with a stick wrongs those who are inoffensive, those who are innocent;

He quickly undergoes one of ten states.

138.

Harsh feeling, loss, and breaking of the body;

Or even a grave illness, and derangement of the mind one may reach.

139.

Or danger from the king, and cruel false accusation;

And utter elimination of relatives, and the perishable nature of possessions.

140.

Or else fire, the blaze, burns his houses;

Upon the collapse of the body, the unwise one is reborn in hell.

141.

Not nakedness, nor matted hair, nor mud, nor fasting, nor lying on bare ground;

Nor dust and dirt, nor striving in the squatting posture, can purify a mortal who has not overcome uncertainty.

142.

Even if adorned, should one practise righteously, peaceful, tamed, fixed in destiny, a practitioner of the holy life;

Having laid aside the rod towards all beings, he is a brahmin, he is an ascetic, he is a monk.

143.

Is there any person in the world restrained by shame,

Who awakens from sleep, like a good horse to the whip?

144.

Just as a good horse struck by the whip, be ardent and stirred with urgency;

With faith and morality and energy, with concentration and judgment of the teaching;

Accomplished in true knowledge and conduct, mindful, you will abandon this suffering which is not small.

145.

Irrigators lead water, fletchers straighten the arrow;

Carpenters straighten wood, the virtuous tame themselves.

The Chapter on the Rod is concluded as tenth.

Next Chapter 11. The Chapter on Old Age
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