Chapter 5:  The Fool


Night is long for one lying awake.
Seven miles is long for one exhausted.
Samsara is long for fools
        Ignorant of true Dharma

If, while on your way,
        You meet no one your equal or better,
Steadily continue on your way alone.
        There is no fellowship with fools.

A fool suffers, thinking,
        "I have children!  I have wealth!"
One's self is not even one's own.
        How then are children?  How then is wealth?

A fool conscious of her foolishness
        Is to the extent wise.
But the fool who considers himself wise
        Is the one to be called a fool.

A fool associating with a sage,
        Even if for a lifetime,
Will no more perceive the Dharma
        Than a spoon will perceive the taste of soup.

Fools with no sense
        Go about as their own enemies,
Doing evil deeds that
        Bear bitter fruit.
 
 No deed is good
        That one regrets having done,
        That results in weeping
        And a tear-streaked face.

A deed is good
        That one doesn't regret having done,
        That results in joy
        And delight.  

As long evil has not borne fruit,
        The fool thinks it is like honey.
But when evil does bear fruit,
        Then the fool suffers.

The foolish ascetic who month after month
        Eats food with the tip of a blade of grass
Is not worth a fraction
        Of a person who has fathomed the Dharma.

Like fresh milk,
        Evil deeds do not immediately curdles;
Rather, like fire covered with ash,
        They follow the fool, smoldering.

Reasoning is harmful
        To fools;
It ruins their good fortune
        And splits open their heads.

Fools will want unwarranted status,
        Deference from fellow monks,
Authority in the monasteries,
        And homage from good families.
"Let both householders and renunciants
        Believe that I did this.
        Let them obey me in eery task!"
Such are the thoughts of a fool
        Who cultivates desire and pride.

The way to material gain is one thing,
        The path to Nirvana another.
Knowing this, a monk who is the Buddha's disciple
        Should not delight in being venerated,
        But cultivate solitude instead. 





 The Dhammapada: A New Translation of the Buddhist Classic with Annotations
    by Gil Fronsdal  
 
 


 
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