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Khuddaka
Nikaya
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The Sutta Nipata
The "Sutta Collection"
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Sutta Nipata V.2
Tissa-metteyya-manava-puccha
Tissa-metteyya's Questions
Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.
Tissa-metteyya:
Who
here in the world
is contented?
Who
has no agitations?
What thinker
knowing both sides,
doesn't adhere in between?
Whom
do you call a great person?
Who here
has gone past
the seamstress:
craving.
The Buddha:
He who
in the midst of sensualities,
follows the holy life,
always mindful, craving-free;
the monk who is
-- through fathoming things --
Unbound:
he has no agitations. He,
the thinker
knowing both sides,
doesn't adhere in between. He
I call a great person. He
here has gone past
the seamstress:
craving.
Note
AN VI.61 reports a discussion among several elder monks as to
what is meant in this poem by "both sides" and "in between."
Six of the elders express the following separate opinions:
-
Contact is the first side, the origination of contact the
second side, and the cessation of contact is in between.
-
The past is the first side, the future the second, and
the present is in between.
-
Pleasant feeling is the first side, painful feeling the
second, and neither-pleasant-nor-painful feeling is in between.
-
Name (mental phenomena) is the first side, form (physical
phenomena) the second, and consciousness is in between.
-
The six external sense media (sights, sounds, aromas,
flavors, tactile sensations, ideas) are the first side, the six internal
sense media (eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, intellect) the second side, and
consciousness is in between.
-
Self-identity is the first side, the origination of
self-identity the second, and the cessation of self-identity is in between.
The issue is then taken to the Buddha, who states that all
six interpretations are well-spoken, but the interpretation he had in mind when
speaking the poem was the first.
---o0o--- Contents
| Ch I
| Ch II |Ch
III | Ch IV|
ChV
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Khuddaka
Nikaya contents:
Dhammapada
| Therigatha
| Udana
Theragatha|
Sutta
Nipata |
Itivuttaka
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| The Sutta Pitaka |
The Vinaya Pitaka
|
the Abhidhamma Pitaka
|
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Computer layout:
Nhi Tuong
Update : 01-05-2002
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