Khuddaka Nikaya


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Sutta Nipāta
3
Sutta 11. Nalaka Sutta

[pali] [faus]

To Nalaka

Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.

For free distribution only.

 


 

Asita the seer, in his mid-day meditation,
saw the devas of the Group of Thirty
    -- exultant, ecstatic --
dressed in pure white, honoring Indra,
holding up banners, cheering wildly,
and on seeing the devas so joyful and happy,
having paid his respects, he said:

"Why is the deva community
    so wildly elated?
Why are they holding up banners
and waving them around?
Even after the war with the Asuras
    -- when victory was the devas',
    the Asuras defeated --
even then there was no excitement like this.
Seeing what marvel
are the devas so joyful?
    They shout,
    they sing,
    play music,
    clap their hands,
    dance.
So I ask you, who live on Mount Meru's summit.
Please dispel my doubt quickly, dear sirs."

"The Bodhisatta, the foremost jewel,
    unequaled,
has been born for welfare and ease
    in the human world,
in a town in the Sakyan countryside,
    Lumbini.
That's why we're all so wildly elated.
He, the highest of all beings,
the ultimate person,
a bull among men, foremost of all people,
will set turning the Wheel [of Dhamma]
in the grove named after the seers,
like a strong, roaring lion,
the conqueror of beasts."

Hearing these words,
Asita quickly descended [from heaven]
and went to Suddhodana's dwelling.
There, taking a seat, he said to the Sakyans:
    "Where is the prince?
    I, too, want to see him."
The Sakyans then showed
to the seer named Asita
    their son, the prince,
    like gold aglow,
burnished by a most skillful smith
in the mouth of the furnace,
blazing with glory, flawless in color.
On seeing the prince blazing like flame,
pure like the bull of the stars
going across the sky
    -- the burning sun,
    released from the clouds of autumn --
he was exultant, filled with abundant rapture.
The devas held in the sky
a many-spoked sunshade
of a thousand circles.
Gold-handled whisks
waved up and down,
but those holding the whisks and the sunshade
    couldn't be seen.
The matted-haired seer
named Dark Splendor,
seeing the boy, like an ornament of gold
on the red woolen blanket,
a white sunshade held over his head,
received him, happy and pleased.
And on receiving the bull of the Sakyans,
longingly, the master of mantras and signs
exclaimed with a confident mind:
    "This one is unsurpassed,
    the highest of the biped race."
Then, foreseeing his own imminent departure,
he, dejected, shed tears.
On seeing him weeping,
the Sakyans asked:
    "But surely there will be
    no danger for the prince?"
On seeing the Sakyans' sense of compunction
he replied, "I foresee for the prince
    no harm.
Nor will there be any danger for him.
This one isn't lowly: be assured.
    This prince will touch
    the ultimate self-awakening.
He, seeing the utmost purity,
will set rolling the Wheel of Dhamma
through sympathy for the welfare of many.
His holy life will spread far and wide.
    But as for me,
my life here has no long remainder;
my death will take place before then.
    I won't get to hear
the Dhamma of this one with the peerless role.
That's why I'm stricken,
    afflicted, and pained."

He, having brought the Sakyans
abundant rapture,
the follower of the holy life
left the inner chamber and,
out of sympathy for his nephew,
urged him on toward the Dhamma
of the one with the peerless role:
"When you hear from another the word,
    "Awakened One,"
or "Attaining self-awakening,
he lays open the path of the Dhamma,"
go there and ask him yourself.
    Follow the holy life
    under that Blessed One."

Instructed by the one
whose mind was set on his benefit,
    Such,
seeing in the future the utmost purity,
Nalaka, who had laid up a store of merit,
awaited the Victor expectantly,
guarding his senses.
On hearing word of the Victor's
turning of the foremost wheel,
    he went, he saw
the bull among seers. Confident,
he asked the foremost sage
about the highest sagacity,
now that Asita's forecast
had come to pass.

[Nalaka:]

Now that I know
Asita's words to be true,
I ask you, Gotama,
you who have gone
to the beyond of all things.
I'm intent on the homeless life;
I long for the almsround.
Tell me sage, when I ask you,
the utmost state of sagacity.

[The Buddha:]

I'll explain to you
a sagacity     hard to do,
        hard to endure.
Come now, I'll tell you.
Be steadfast. Be firm.
Practice even-mindedness,
for in a village
there's praise and abuse.
Ward off any flaw in the heart.
Go about calmed and not haughty.
High and low things will come up
like fire-flames in a forest.
Women seduce a sage.
    May they not seduce you.[1]
Abstaining from sexual intercourse,
abandoning various sensual pleasures,
be unopposed, unattached,
to beings moving and still.
    'As I am, so are these.
    As are these, so am I.'
Drawing the parallel to
    yourself,
neither kill nor get others to kill.
Abandoning the wants and greed
where people run-of-the-mill are stuck,
    practice with vision,
    cross over this hell.
Stomach not full,
moderate in food,
having few wants,
not being greedy,
always not hankering after desire:
    one without hankering,
    is one who's unbound.

Having gone on his almsround, the sage
should then go to the forest,
standing or taking a seat
    at the foot of a tree.
The enlightened one, intent on jhāna,
should find delight in the forest,
should practice jhāna at the foot of a tree,
attaining his own satisfaction.
Then, at the end of the night,
he should go to the village,
    not delighting in an invitation
    or gift from the village.
Having gone to the village,
the sage should not carelessly
go among families.
Cutting off chatter,
he shouldn't utter a scheming word.
    'I got something,
    that's fine.
    I got nothing,
    that's good.'
Being such with regard to both,
he returns to the very same tree.
Wandering with his bowl in hand
    -- not dumb,
    but seemingly dumb --
he shouldn't despise a piddling gift
nor disparage the giver.

High and low are the practices
proclaimed by the contemplative.
They don't go twice to the further shore.
This [Unbinding] isn't sensed only once.[2]

In one who has no attachment --
the monk who has cut the stream,
abandoning what is
and isn't a duty --
    no fever is found.

I'll explain to you
sagacity:    be like a razor's edge.
Pressing tongue against palate,
    restrain your stomach.
Neither be lazy in mind,
nor have many thoughts.
Be committed to taintlessness,
    independent,
having the holy life as your aim.
Train in     solitude
        and the contemplative's task,
    Solitude
    is called
    sagacity.
Alone, you truly delight
    and shine in the ten directions.

On hearing the fame of the enlightened
    -- those who practice jhāna,
    relinquishing sensual pleasures --
my disciple should foster
    all the more
    conviction and sense of shame.

Know from the rivers
in clefts and in crevices:
those in small channels flow
            noisily,
    the great
    flow silent.
Whatever's not full
    makes noise.
Whatever is full
    is quiet.
The fool is like a half-empty pot;
one who is wise, a full lake.
A contemplative who speaks a great deal
    endowed with meaning:
    knowing, he teaches the Dhamma,
    knowing, he speaks a great deal.
But he who,
    knowing, is restrained,
    knowing, doesn't speak a great deal:
he is a sage
    worthy of sagehood;
he is a sage,
    his sagehood attained.

 


[1] For an instance of a man who tried to seduce a nun, see Therigatha XIV.

[2] According to the Commentary, the high and low practices taught by the Buddha are, respectively, the practice-mode of pleasant practice and quick intuition, and the practice-mode of painful practice and slow intuition (see AN IV.162; The Wings to Awakening, passage 84). These modes of practice don't go twice to the further shore in the sense that each of the four paths -- to stream-entry, once-returning, non-returning, and Arahantship -- abandons whatever defilements it is capable of abandoning once and for all. There is no need to repeat the path. Unbinding is not attained only once in the sense that it is touched as the result of each of the four paths.

 


 

References:

See also: AN III.120.

 


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