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Saɱyutta Nikāya
4. Saḷāyatana Vagga
35. Saḷāyatana Saɱyutta
§ III: Paññāsaka Tatiya
1. Yoga-k-Khemi Vagga

The Book of the Kindred Sayings
4. The Book Called the Saḷāyatana-Vagga
Containing Kindred Sayings on the 'Six-Fold Sphere' of Sense and Other Subjects
35. Kindred Sayings the Sixfold Sphere of Sense
§ III: The 'Third Fifty' Suttas
1. The Chapter on Winning Security

Sutta 111

Paṭhama Parijānana Suttaɱ

Understanding (i)[1]

Translated by F. L. Woodward
Edited by Mrs. Rhys Davids

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[89] [55]

[1][bodh] Thus have I heard:

The Exalted One once staying near Sāvatthī.

Then the Exalted One addressed the brethren, saying:

"Brethren."

"Lord," responded those brethren to the Exalted One.

The Exalted One thus spake:

"By not comprehending,
by not understanding,
without detaching himself from,
without abandoning
the eye,
one is incapable of the destruction of ill.

By not comprehending,
by not understanding,
without detaching himself from,
without abandoning
the ear,
one is incapable of the destruction of ill.

By not comprehending,
by not understanding,
without detaching himself from,
without abandoning
the nose,
one is incapable of the destruction of ill.

By not comprehending,
by not understanding,
without detaching himself from,
without abandoning
the tongue,
one is incapable of the destruction of ill.

By not comprehending,
by not understanding,
without detaching himself from,
without abandoning
the body,
one is incapable of the destruction of ill.

By not comprehending,
by not understanding,
without detaching himself from,
without abandoning
the mind,
one is incapable of the destruction of ill.

 

§

 

But by comprehending,
by understanding,
by detaching himself from,
by abandoning
the eye,
one is capable of the destruction of ill.

By comprehending,
by understanding,
by detaching himself from,
by abandoning
the ear,
one is capable of the destruction of ill.

By comprehending,
by understanding,
by detaching himself from,
by abandoning
the nose,
one is capable of the destruction of ill.

By comprehending,
by understanding,
by detaching himself from,
by abandoning
the tongue,
one is capable of the destruction of ill.

By comprehending,
by understanding,
by detaching himself from,
by abandoning
the body,
one is capable of the destruction of ill.

By comprehending,
by understanding,
by detaching himself from,
by abandoning
the mind,
one is capable of the destruction of ill."

 


[1] Cf. supra. 26; Pts. of Contr., 117.


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