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THE PATH OF
PURIFICATION (VISUDDHIMAGGA)
Part I. VIRTUE I.
Purification of Virtue
Chapter II: DESCRIPTION OF THE ASCETIC PRACTICES(Dhutanga-niddesa)
1. [59] Now while a meditator
is engaged in the pursuit of virtue, he should set about undertaking the
ascetic practices in order to perfect those special qualities of fewness
of wishes, contentment, etc., by which the virtue of the kind already
described is cleansed. For when his virtue is thus washed clean of
stains by the waters of such special qualities as fewness of wishes,
contentment, effacement, seclusion, dispersal, energy, and modest needs,
it will become quite purified; and his vows will succeed as well. And
so, when his whole behaviour has been purified by the special quality of
blameless virtue and vows and he has become established in the [first]
three of the ancient Noble One's Heritages, he may become worthy to
attain to the fourth called 'delight in development' (A.ii,27). We shall
therefore begin the explanation of the ascetic practices.
[THE 13 KINDS OF ASCETIC
PRACTICES]
2. Thirteen
kinds of ascetic practices have been allowed by the Blessed One to
clansmen who have given up the things of the flesh and, regardless of
body and life, are desirous of undertaking a practice in conformity
[with their aim]. They are: i. the refuse-rag-wearer's
practice, ii. the triple-robe-wearer's practice,
iii. the alms-food-eater's practice, iv. the
house-to-house-seeker's practice, v. the
one-sessioner's practice, vi. the bowl-food-eater's practice,
vii. the later-food-refuser's practice, viii. the
forest-dweller's practice; ix. the tree-root-dweller's
practice, x. the open-air-dweller's practice,
xi. the charnel-ground-dweller's practice, xii. the
any-bed-users' practice, xiii. the sitter's
practice, 3. Herein,
(1) As to meaning, (2) character,
etcetera, (3) The undertaking and
directions, And then the grade, and
breach as well, And benefits of each
besides, (4) As to the profitable
triad, (5) 'Ascetic' and so on
distinguished, (6) And as to groups,
and also (7) singly, The exposition
should be known. [60] 4. 1. Herein, as to
meaning, in the first place. i. It is 'refuse
(pamsukula)' since, owing to its being found on refuse in any
such place as a street, a charnel ground, or a midden, it belongs, as it
were, to the refuse in the sense of being dumped in any one of these
places. Or alternatively: like refuse it gets to a vile state (pamsu
viya kucchitabhavam ulati), thus it is 'refuse (pamsukula)';
it goes to a vile state, is what is meant. The wearing of a
refuse-[rag], which has acquired its derivative name {1} in this way, is
'refuse-[rag-wearing] (pamsukula)'. That is his habit, thus he is
a 'refuse-[rag-wear-]er (pamsukulika)'. The practice
(anga) of the refuse-[rag-wear]-er is the refuse-[rag-wear-]er's
practice (pamsukulikanga)'. It is the action that is called the
'practice'. Therefore it should be understood as a term for that by
undertaking which one becomes a refuse-[rag-wear-]er.
ii. In the same way, he has the habit of [wearing] the triple robe
(ti-civara) - in other words, the cloak of patches, the upper
garment, and the inner clothing -, thus he is a 'triple-robe-[wear-]er
(tecivarika)'. His practice is called the 'triple-robe-wearer's
practice'. 5. iii. The dropping (pata) of the
lumps (pinda) of material sustenance (amisa), called alms
(bhikkha) is 'alms food (pindapata)'; the falling
(nipatana) into the bowl of lumps (pinda) given by others,
is what is meant. He gleans that alms food (that falling of lumps), he
seeks it by approaching such and such a family, thus he is called an
'alms-food-[eat-]er (pindapatika)'. Or his vow is to gather
(patitum) {2} the lump
(pinda), thus he is a 'lump-gatherer (pindapatin)'. To
'gather' is to wander for. A 'lump-gatherer (pindapatin)' is the
same as an 'alms-food-eater (pindapatika)'. The practice of the
almsfood-eater is the 'alms-food-eater's practice'. 6.
iv. It is a hiatus (avakhandana) that is called a 'gap
(dana)'. {3} It is removed
(apeta) from a gap, thus it is called 'gapless (apadana)';
the meaning is, it is without hiatus. It is together with (saha)
what is gapless (sapadana), thus it is 'with the gapless,
(sapadana)'; devoid of hiatus - from house to house - is what is
meant. His habit is to wander on what-is-with-the-gapless, thus he is 'a
gaples wanderer (sapadana-carin)'. A gapless wanderer is the same
as a 'house-to-house seeker (sapadana-carika)'. His practice is
the 'house-to-house-seeker's practice'. 7. v. Eating in
one session is: 'one-session'. He has that habit, thus he is a
'one-sessioner'. His practice is the 'one-sessioner's practice.'
vi. Alms (pinda) in one bowl (patta)
only, because of refusing a second vessel, is 'bowl-alms
(patta-pinda)'. Now, making 'bowl-alms (patta-pinda)' the
name for the taking of alms-food in the bowl: bowl-alms-food is his
habit, thus he is a 'bowl-food-eater (pattapindika)'. His
practice is the 'bowl-food-eater's practice'. 8. vii. 'No
(khalu)' is a particle in the sense of refusing [61]. Food
(bhatta) obtained later by one who has shown that he is satisfied
is called 'later-food (paccha-bhatta)'. The eating of that later
food is 'later-food-eating'. Making 'later-food (paccha-bhatta)
the name for that later-food-eating: later-food is his habit, thus he is
a 'later-food-[eat-]er (pacchabhattika)'. Not a later-food-eater
is a 'no-later-food-[eat-]er (khalu-pacchabhattika)', [that is, a
'later-food-refuser'.] This is the name for one who as an undertaking
refuses extra food. But it is said in the commentary {4} 'Khalu is a
certain kind of bird. When it has taken a fruit into its beak and that
drops, it does not eat any more. This [bhikkhu] is like that'. Thus he
is 'a later-food-refuser (khalu-paccha-bhattika)'. His practice
is the 'later-food-refuser's practice'. 9. viii.
His habit is dwelling in the forest, thus he is a 'forest-dweller'. His
practice is the 'forest-dweller's practice'. ix.
Dwelling at the root of a tree is 'tree-root-dwelling.' He has that
habit, thus he is a 'tree-root-dweller'. The practice of the
tree-root-dweller is the 'tree-root-dweller's practice'.
x., xi. Likewise with the open-air-dweller and the
charnel-ground-dweller. 10. xii. Only what has been
distributed (yad eva santhata) is 'as distributed
yatha-santhata)'. This is a term for the resting place first
allotted thus 'This one falls to you'. He has the habit of dwelling in
that as distributed, thus he is an 'as-distributed user
(yathasanthatika)', [that is, an 'any-bed-user':] His practice is
the 'any-bed-user's pratice.' xiii. He has the habit of
keeping to the sitting [posture when resting], refusing to lie down,
thus he is a 'sitter'. His practice is the 'sitter's
practice'. 11. All these, however, are the practices
(anga) of a bhikkhu who is ascetic (dhuta) because he has
shaken off (dhuta) defilement by undertaking one or other of
them. Or the knowledge that has got the name 'ascetic (dhuta)'
because it shakes off (dhunana) defilement is a practice
(anga) belonging to these, thus they are 'ascetic practices
(dhut-anga)'. Or alternatively, they are ascetic (dhuta)
because they shake off (niddhunana) opposition, and they are
practices (anga) because they are a way
(patipatti). This, firstly, is how the exposition
should be known here 'as to meaning'. 12. 2. All of them
have as their characteristic the volition of undertaking. For this is
said [in the commentary] 'He who does the undertaking is a person. That
whereby he does the undertaking is states of consciousness and
consciousness-concomitants. The volition of the act of undertaking is
the ascetic practice. What it rejects is the instance'. All have the
function of eliminating cupidity, and they manifest themselves with the
production of non-cupidity. For their proximate cause they have the
noble states consisting of fewness of wishes, and so on. [62] This is
how the exposition should be known as to characteristic, etc.,
here. 13. As regards the five beginning with the
undertaking and directions: during the Blessed One's lifetime all
ascetic practices should be undertaken in the Blessed One's presence.
After his attainment of nibbana this should be done in the presence of
it principal disciple. When he is not available it should be done in the
presence of one whose cankers are destroyed, of a Non-returner, of a
Once-returner, of a Stream-enterer, of one who knows the three Pitakas,
of one who knows two of the Pitakas, of one who knows one of the
Pitakas, of one who knows one collection, {5} of a teacher of
the Commentaries. When he is not available it should be done in the
presence of an observer of an ascetic practice. When he is not
available, then after one has swept out the shrine terrace they can be
undertaken seated in a reverential posture as though pronouncing them in
the Fully Enlightened One's presence. Also it is permitted to undertake
them by oneself. And here should be told the story of
the senior of the two brothers who were Elders at Cetiyapabbata and
their fewness of wishes with respect to the ascetic practices (see
MA.ii,140). {6}
This, firstly, is what applies to all [the
practices]. 14. Now we shall proceed to comment on the
undertaking, directions, grade, breach, and benefits, of each one
[separately]. i. First, the refuse-rag-wearer's
practice is undertaken with one of these two statements: 'I refuse
robes given by householders' or 'I undertake the refuse-rag-wearer's
practice'. This, firstly, is the undertaking. 15.
One who has done this should get a robe of one of the following kinds:
one from a charnel ground, one from a shop, a cloth from a street, a
cloth from a midden, one from a childbed, an ablution cloth, a cloth
from a washing place, one worn going to and returning from [the charnel
ground], one scorched by fire, one gnawed by cattle, one gnawed by ants,
one gnawed by rats, one cut at the end, one cut at the edge, one carried
as a flag, a robe from a shrine, an ascetic's robe, one from a
consecration, one produced by supernormal power, one from a highway, one
borne by the wind, one presented by deities, one from the sea. Taking
one of these robe cloths, he should tear off and throw away the weak
parts, and then wash the sound parts, and make up a robe. He can use it
after getting rid of his old robe given by
householders. 16. Herein, 'one from a charnel
ground' is one dropped on a charnel ground. 'One
from a shop' is one dropped at the door of a shop.
'A cloth from a street' is a cloth thrown into a street from
inside a window by those who seek merit. 'A cloth
from a midden' [63] is a cloth thrown onto a place for
rubbish. 'One from a childbed' is a cloth thrown
away after wiping up the stains of childbirth with it. The mother of
Tissa the Minister, it seems, had the stains of childbirth wiped up with
a cloth worth a hundred [pieces], and thinking 'The refuse rag wearers
will take it', she had it thrown onto the Talaveli Road'. {7} Bhikkhus took
it for the purpose of mending worn places. 17. 'An
ablution cloth' is one that people who are made by devil doctors to
bathe themselves, including their heads, are accustomed to throw away as
a 'cloth of ill luck.' 'A cloth from a washing
place' is rags thrown away at a washing place where bathing is
done. 'One worn going to and returning from' is
one that people throw away after they have gone to a charnel ground and
returned and bathed. 'One scorched by fire' is
one partly scorched by fire; for people throw that away.
'One gnawed by cattle,' etc., are obvious; for people throw away
such as these too. 'One carried as flag': Those
who board a ship do so after hoisting a flag. It is allowable to take
this when they have gone out of sight. Also it is allowable, when the
two armies have gone away, to take a flag that has been hoisted on a
battlefield. 18. 'A robe from a shrine' is an
offering made by draping an ant-hill [in cloth]. 'An
ascetic's robe' is one belonging to a bhikkhu.
'One from a consecration' is one thrown away at the king's
consecration place. 'One produced by supernormal
power' is a 'come-bhikkhu' robe. {8}
'One from a highway' is one dropped in the
middle of a road. But one dropped by the owner's negligence should be
taken only after waiting a while. 'One borne by the
wind' is one that falls a long way off, having been carried by the
wind. It is allowable to take it if the owners are not in
sight. 'One presented by deities' is one given by
deities like that given to the Elder Anuruddha (See
DhA.ii,173-4). 'One from the sea' is one washed
up on dry land by the sea waves. 19. One given thus 'We
give it to the Order' or got by those who go out for alms-cloth is not a
refuse-rag. And in the case of one presented by a bhikkhu, one given
after it has been got [at a presentation of robes by householders] at
the end of the Rains, or a 'resting-place robe', [that is, one
automatically supplied by a householder to the occupant of a certain
resting place,] is not a refuse-rag. It is a refuse-rag only when given
after not having been so obtained. And herein, that placed by the donors
at a bhikkhu's feet but given by that bhikkhu to the refuse-rag wearer
by placing it in his hand is called pure in one way. That given to a
bhikkhu by placing it in his hand but placed by him at the [refuse-rag
wearer's] feet is also pure in one way. That which is both placed at a
bhikkhu's feet and then given by him in the same way is pure in both
ways. [64] One obtained by being placed in the hand and [given by being]
placed in the hand too is not a strict man's robe. So a refuse-rag
wearer should use the robe after getting to know about the kinds of
refuse-rags. These are the directions for it in
this instance. 20. The grades are these. There are
three kinds of refuse-rag wearers: the strict, the medium, and the mild.
Herein, one who takes it only from a charnel ground is strict. One who
takes one left [by someone, thinking] 'One gone forth will take it' is
medium. One who takes one given by being placed at his feet [by a
bhikkhu] is mild. The moment any one of these of his own
choice or inclination agrees to [accept] a robe given by a househblder,
his ascetic practice is broken. This is the breach in this
instance. 21. The benefits are these. He actually
practises in conformity with the Dependence, because of the words 'The
Going Forth by depending on the refuse-rag robe' (Vin.i,58,96); he is
established in the first of the Noble One's Heritages (see A.ii,27);
there is no suffering due to protecting; he exists independent of
others; there is no fear of robbers; there is no craving connected with
use [of robes]; it is a requisite suitable for an ascetic; it is a
requisite recommended by the Blessed One thus 'valueless, easy to get,
and blameless' (A.ii,26); it inspires confidence; it produces the fruits
of fewness of wishes, etc.; the right way is cultivated; a good example
is set {9} to later
generations. 22. While striving for
Death's army's rout
The ascetic clad in rag-robe
cloth Got
from a rubbish heap, shines
bright As
mail-clad warrior in the
fight.
This robe the world's great teacher
wore, Leaving
rare Kasi cloth and more;
- Who would
not have a robe to keep
Of rags from
off a rubbish
heap?
Minding the words he did
profess When
he went into homelessness,
Let him to
wear such rags delight
As one in
seemly garb bedight.
This, firstly, is the
commentary on the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits,
in the case of the refuse-rag-wearer's practice. 23. ii.
Next there is the triple-robe-wearer's practice. This is
undertaken with one of the following statements: 'I refuse a fourth
robe' or 'I undertake the triple-robe-wearer's practice'.
[65] When a triple-robe wearer has got cloth for a robe,
he can put it by for as long as, owing to ill-health, he is unable to
make it up, or for as long as he does not find a helper, or lacks
needle, etc., and there is no fault in his putting it by. But it is not
allowed to put it by once it has been dyed. That is called cheating the
ascetic practice. These are the directions for
it. 24. This, too has three grades. Herein, one
who is strict should, at the time of dyeing, first dye either the inner
cloth or the upper garment, and having dyed it, he should wear that
round the waist and dye the other. Then he can put that on over the
shoulder and dye the cloak of patches. But he is not allowed to wear the
cloak of patches round the waist. This is the duty when in an abode
inside a village. But it is allowable for him in the forest to wash and
dye two together. However, he should sit in place near [to the robes] so
that, if he sees anyone, he can pull a yellow cloth over himself. But
for the medium one there is a yellow cloth in the dyeing room for use
while dyeing, and it is allowable for him to wear that [as an inner
cloth] or to put it on [as an upper garment] in order to do the work of
dyeing. For the mild one it is allowable to wear, or put on, the robes
of bhikkhus who are in communion (i.e. not suspended, etc.) in order to
do the work of dyeing. A bedspread that remains where it is {10} is also
allowable for him, but he must not take it about him. And it is allowed
for him to use from time to time the robes of bhikkhus who are in
communion. It is allowed to one who wears the triple robe as an ascetic
practice to have a yellow shoulder-cloth too as fourth; but it must be
only a span wide and three hands long. The moment anyone
of these three agrees to [accept] a fourth robe, his ascetic practice is
broken. This is the breach in this instance. 25.
The benefits are these. The bhikkhu who is a triple-robe wearer
is content with the robe as a protection, for the body. Hence he goes
taking it with him as bird does its wings (see M.i,180); and such
special qualities as having few undertakings, avoidance of storage of
cloth, a frugal existence, the abandoning of greed for many robes,
living in effacement by observing moderation even in what is permitted,
production of the fruits of fewness of wishes, etc., are perfected. [66]
26. No risk of hoarding haunts the man of
wit Who wants no
extra cloth for requisite;
Using the triple robe where'er he goes,
The pleasant relish
of content he knows.
So, would the adept wander undeterred
With naught else
but his robes, as flies the bird
With its' own
wings, then let him too rejoice
That frugalness in
garments be his choice. This is the commentary on the
undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the case of
the triple-robe-wearer's practice. 27. iii. The
alms-food-eater's practice is undertaken with one of the
following statements: 'I refuse a supplementary [food] supply' or 'I
undertake the alms-food-eater's practice'. Now this
alms-food eater should not accept the following fourteen kinds of meal:
a meal offered to the Order, a meal offered to specified bhikkhus, an
invitation, a meal given by a ticket, one each half-moon day, one each
Uposatha day, one each first of the half-moon, a meal given for
visitors, a meal for travellers, a meal for the sick, a meal for
sick-nurses, a meal supplied to a [particular] residence, a meal given
in a principal house, {11} a meal given
in turn. If, instead of saying 'Take a meal given to the
Order', [meals] are given saying 'The Order is taking alms in our house;
you may take alms too', it is allowable to consent. Tickets from the
Order that are not for actual food, {12} and also a
meal cooked in a monastery, are allowable as well.
These are the directions for it. 28. This too has
three grades. Herein, one who is strict takes alms brought both
from before and from behind, and he gives the bowl to those who take it
while he stands outside a door. He also takes alms brought to the
refectory and given there. But he does not take alms by sitting [and
waiting for it to be brought later] that day. The medium one takes it as
well by sitting [and waiting for it to be brought later] that day; but
he does not consent to [its being brought] next day. The mild one
consents to alms [being brought] on the next day and on the day after.
Both these last miss the joy of an independent life. There is, perhaps,
a preaching on the Noble Ones' Heritages (A.ii,28) in some village. The
strict one says to the others 'Let us go, friends, and listen to the
Dhamma'. One of them says 'I have been made to sit [and wait] by a man,
venerable sir', and the other 'I have consented to [receive] alms
tomorrow, venerable sir'. So they are both losers. The other wanders for
alms in the morning and then he goes and savours the taste of the Dhamma
[67] The moment any one of these three agrees to the
extra gain consisting of a meal given to the Order, etc., his ascetic
practice is broken. This is the breach in this
instance. 29. The benefits are these. He actually
practices in conformity with the Dependence because of the words 'The
Going Forth by depending on the eating of lumps of alms food'
(Vin.i,58,96); he is established in the second of the Noble Ones'
Heritages; his existence is independent of others; it is a requisite
recommended by the Blessed One thus 'Valueless, easy to get, blameless'
(A.ii,26); idleness is eliminated; livelihood is purified; the practice
of the minor Training Rules [of the Patimokkha] is fulfilled; he is not
maintained by another; he helps others; pride is abandoned; craving for
tastes is checked; the training precepts about eating as a group;
substituting one meal [invitation for another] (See Vin. Pacittiya 33
and Comy.), and good behaviour, are not contravened; his life conforms
to [the principles of] fewness of wishes; he cultivates the right way;
he has compassion for later generations. 30. The
monk content with alms for food
Has independent livelihood,
And greed in him
no footing finds;
He is as free as the four
winds.
He never
need be indolent,
His livelihood is innocent,
So let a wise man
not disdain
Alms-gathering for his domain.
Since it is
said: 'If a bhikkhu can
support himself on alms
And live without another's
maintenance, And pay no
heed as well to gain and fame,
The very gods indeed
might envy him' (Ud.31). This is the commentary on the
undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the case of
the alms-food-eater's practice. 31. iv. The
house-to-house-seeker's practice is undertaken with one of
the following statements: 'I refuse a greedy alms round' or 'I undertake
the house-to-house-seeker's practice'. Now the
house-to-house seeker should stop at the village gate and make sure that
there is no danger. If there is danger in any street or village, it is
allowable to leave it out and wander for alms elsewhere. When there is a
house door or a street or a village where he [regularly] gets nothing at
all, he can go [past it] not counting it as the village. But wherever he
gets anything at all it is not allowed [subsequently] to go [past] there
and leave it out. This bhikkhu should enter the village early so that he
will be able to leave out any inconvenient place and go elsewhere. [68]
But if people who are giving a gift [of a meal] in a monastery or who
are coming along the road take his bowl and give alms food, it is
allowable. And as this [bhikkhu] is going along the road, he should,
when it is the time, wander for alms in any village he comes to and not
pass it by. If he gets nothing there or only a little, he should wander
for alms in the next village in order. These are the directions
for it. 32. This too has three grades. Herein, one
who is strict does not take alms brought from before or brought from
behind or brought to the refectory and given there. He hands over his
bowl at a door, however; for in this ascetic practice there is none
equal to the Elder Maha Kassapa, yet an instance in which even he handed
over his bowl is mentioned (see Ud.29). The medium one takes what is
brought from before and from behind and what is brought to the
refectory; and he hands over his bowl at at a door. But he does not sit
waiting for alms. Thus he conforms to the rule of the strict alms-food
eater. The mild one sits waiting [for alms to be brought] that day. The
ascetic practice of these three is broken as soon as the greedy alms
round starts [by going only to the houses where good alms food is
given]. This is the breach in this instance. 33.
The benefits are these. He is always a stranger among families
and is like the moon (see S.ii,197); he abandons avarice about families;
he is compassionate impartially; he avoids the dangers in being
supported by a family; he does not delight in invitations; he does not
hope for [meals] to be brought; his life conforms to [the principles of]
fewness of wishes, and so on. 34. The monk
who at each house his begging plies
Is moonlike, ever
new to families,
Nor does he grudge to help all
equally, Free from
the risks of
house-dependency.
Who would the self-indulgent round
forsake, And roam
the world at will, the while to make
His downcast eyes
range a yoke-length before,
Then let him
wisely seek from door to door. This is the commentary on
the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the case
of the house-to-houseseeker's practice. [69] 35. v. The
one-sessioner's practice is undertaken with one of the
following statements: 'I refuse eating in several sessions' or 'I
undertake the one-sessioner's practice'. When the
one-sessioner sits down in the sitting hall, instead of sitting on an
elder's seat, he should notice which seat is likely to fall to him and
sit down on that. If his teacher or preceptor arrives while the meal is
still unfinished, it is allowable for him to get up and do the duties.
But the Elder Tipitaka Cula-Abhaya said 'He should either keep his seat
[and finish his meal] or [if he gets up he should leave the rest of] his
meal [in order not to break the ascetic practice]. And this is one whose
meal is still unfinished; therefore let him do the duties, but in that
case let him not eat the [rest of the] meal'. These are the
directions. 36. This too has three grades.
Herein, one who is strict may not take anything more than the food that
he has laid his hand on, whether it is little or much. And if people
bring him ghee, etc., thinking 'The Elder has eaten nothing', while
these are allowable for the purpose of medicine, they are not so for the
purpose of food. The medium one may take more as long as the meal in the
bowl is not exhausted; for he is called 'One who stops when the food is
finished'. The mild one may eat as long as he does not get up from his
seat. He is either 'One who stops with the water' because he eats until
he takes [water for] washing the bowl, or 'One who stops with the
session' because he eats until he gets up. The ascetic
practice of these three is broken at the moment when food has been eaten
at more than one session. This is the breach in this
instance. 37. The benefits are these. He has
little affliction and little sickness; he has lightness, strength, and a
happy life; there is no contravening [rules] about food that is not what
is left over from a meal; craving for tastes is eliminated; his life
conforms to the [principles of] fewness of wishes, and so
on. 38. No illness due to eating shall
he feel Who gladly
in one session takes his
meal; No
longing to indulge his sense of
taste Tempts
him to leave his work to go to
waste.
His
own true happiness a monk may find
In eating in
one session, pure in
mind. Purity
and effacement wait on
this; For it
gives reason to abide in bliss. This is the commentary
on the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the
case of the one-sessioner's practice. [70] 39. vi. The
bowl-food-eater's practice is undertaken with one of the
following statements: 'I refuse a second vessel' or 'I undertake the
bowl-food-eater's practice'. When at the time of
drinking rice gruel, the bowl-food-eater gets curry that is put in a
dish, he can first either eat the curry or drink the rice gruel. If he
puts it in the rice gruel, the rice gruel becomes repulsive when a curry
made with cured fish, etc., is put into it. So it is allowable [to do
this] only in order to use it without making it repulsive. Consequently
this is said with reference to such curry as that. But what is
unrepulsive, such as honey, sugar, {13} etc., should
pe put into it. And in taking it he should take the right amount. It is
allowable to take green vegetables with the hand and eat them. But
unless he does that they should be put into the bowl. Because a second
vessel has been refused it is not allowable [to use] anything else, not
even the leaf of a tree. These are its
directions. 40. This too has three grades.
Herein, for one who is strict, except at the time of eating sugarcane,
it is not allowed [while eating] to throw rubbish away, and it is not
allowed while eating to break up rice-lumps, fish, meat and cakes. [The
rubbish should be thrown away and the rice-lumps, etc., broken up before
starting to eat.] The medium one is allowed to break them up with one
hand while eating; and he is called a 'Hand Ascetic'. The mild one is
called a 'Bowl Ascetic'; anything that can be put into his bowl he is
allowed, while eating, to break up, [that is, rice lumps, etc.,] with
his hand or [such things as palm sugar, ginger, etc.,] with his
teeth. The moment any one of these three agrees to a
second vessel his ascetic practice is broken. This is the breach
in this instance. 41. The benefits are these.
Craving for variety of tastes is eliminated; excessiveness of wishes is
abandoned; he sees the purpose and the [right] amount in nutriment; he
is not bothered with carrying saucers, etc., about; his life conforms to
[the principles of] fewness of wishes and so
on. 42. He baffles doubts that might arise
With extra dishes;
downcast eyes The
true devotedness imply {l4}
Of one uprooting
gluttony.
Wearing
content as if 'twere part
Of his own nature, glad at
heart; None but a
Bowl-food Eater may
Consume his food in such a way. This is the commentary
on the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the
case of the bowl-food-eater's practice. [71] 43. vii.
The later-food-refuser's practice is undertaken with one
of the following statements: 'I refuse additional food' or 'I undertake
the later-food-refuser's practice'. Now when that
later-food refuser has shown that he is satisfied, he should not again
have the food made allowable [by having it put into his hands according
to the rule for bhikkhus] and eat it. These are the directions
for it. 44. This too has three grades. Herein,
there is no showing that he has had enough with respect to the first
lump, but there is when he refuses more while that is being swallowed.
So when one who is strict has thus shown that he has had enough [with
respect to the second lump], he does not eat the second lump after
swallowing the first. The medium one eats also that food with respect to
which he has shown that he has had enough. But the mild one goes on
eating until he gets up from his seat. The moment any
one of these three has eaten what has been made allowable [again] after
he has shown that he has had enough, his ascetic practice is broken.
This is the breach in this instance. 45. The
benefits are these. One is far from committing an offence
concerned with extra food; there is no overloading of the stomach; there
is no keeping food back; there is no renewed search [for food]; he lives
in conformity with [the principles of] fewness of wishes, and so
on. 46. When a wise man refuses
later-food He
needs no extra search in weary mood,
Nor stores
up food till later in the
day, Nor
overloads his stomach in this
way.
So,
would the adept from such faults abstain,
Let him
assume this practice for his gain,
Praised by
the Blessed One, which will augment
The special
qualities such as content. This is the commentary on the
undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the case of
the later-food-refuser's practice. 47. viii. The
forest-dweller's practice is undertaken with one of the
following statements: 'I refuse an abode in a village' or 'I undertake
the forest-dweller's practice'. 48. Now that forest
dweller must leave an abode in a village in order to meet the dawn in
the forest. Herein, a village abode is the village itself with its
precincts. A 'village' may consist of one cottage or several cottages,
it may be enclosed by a wall or not, have human inhabitants or not, and
it can also be a caravan that is inhabited for more than four months.
[72] The 'village precincts' cover the range of a stone thrown by a man
of medium stature standing between the gate-posts of a walled village,
if there are two gateposts, as at Anuradhapura (Cf. Vin.iii,46). The
Vinaya experts say that this [stone's throw] is characterized as up to
the place where a thrown stone falls, as, for instance, when young men
exercise their arms and throw stones in order to show off their
strength. But the Suttanta experts say that it is up to where one thrown
to scare crows normally falls. In the case of an unwalled village, the
house precinct is where the water falls when a woman standing in the
door of the outermost house of all throws water from a basin. Within a
stone's throw of the kind already described from that point is the
village. Within a second stone's throw is the village
precinct. 49. 'Forest', according to the Vinaya method
firstly, is described thus: 'Except the village and its precincts, all
is forest' (Vin.iii,46). According to the Abhidhamma method it is
described thus: 'Having gone out beyond the boundary post, all that is
forest' (Vbh.251; Ps.i,176). But according to the Suttanta method its
characteristic is this: 'A forest abode is five hundred bow-lengths
distant' (Vin.iv,183). That should be defined by measuring it with a
strung instructor's bow from the gate-post of a walled village, or from
the range of the first stone's throw from an unwalled one, up to the
monastery wall. 50. But if the monastery is not walled,
it is said in the Vinaya commentaries, it should be measured by making
the first dwelling of all the limit, or else the refectory or regular
meeting place or Bodhi Tree or shrine, even if that is far from a
dwelling [belonging to the monastery]. But in the Majjhima commentary it
is said that, omitting the precincts of the monastery and the village,
the distance to be measured is that between where the two stones fall.
This is the measure here. 51. Even if the village is
close by and the sounds of men are audible to people in the monastery,
still if it is not possible to go straight to it because of rocks,
rivers, etc., in between, the five hundred bow-lengths can be reckoned
by that road even if one has to go by boat. But anyone who blocks the
path to the village here and there for the purpose of [lengthening it so
as to be able to say that he is] taking up the practice is cheating the
ascetic practice. 52. If a forest-dwelling bhikkhu's
preceptor or teacher is ill and does not get what he needs in the
forest, [73] he should take him to a village abode and attend him there.
But he should leave in time to meet the dawn in a place proper for the
practice. If the affliction increases towards the time of dawn, he must
attend him and not bother about the purity of this ascetic
practice. These are the directions. 53. This
too has three grades. Herein, one who is strict must always meet
the dawn in the forest. The medium one is allowed to live in a village
for the four months of the Rains. And the mild one, for the winter
months too. If in the period defined any one of these
three goes from the forest and hears the Dhamma in a village abode, his
ascetic practice is not broken if he meets the dawn there nor is it
broken if he meets it as he is on his way back after hearing [the
Dhamma]. But if, when the preacher has got up, he thinks 'We shall go
after lying down awhile' and he meets the dawn while asleep or if of his
own choice he meets the dawn while in a village abode, then his ascetic
practice is broken. This is the breach in this
instance. 54. The benefits are these. A
forest-dwelling bhikkhu who has given attention to the perception of
forest (see M. sutta 121) can obtain hitherto unobtained concentration,
or preserve that already obtained. And the Master is pleased with him,
according as it is said 'So, Nagita, I am pleased with that bhikkhu's
dwelling in the forest' (A.iii,343). And when he lives in a remote abode
his mind is not distracted by unsuitable visible objects, and so on. He
is free from anxiety; he abandons attachment to life; he enjoys the
taste of the bliss of seclusion, and the state of the refuse-rag wearer,
etc. becomes him. 55. He lives secluded and
apart, Remote abodes
delight his heart; The
Saviour of the world, besides,
He gladdens that in groves abides.
The hermit that in woods
can dwell Alone, may
gain the bliss as well
Whose savour is beyond the price
Of royal bliss, in
paradise. Wearing the
robe of rags he may Go
forth into the forest fray;
Such is his mail, for weapons too
The other practices will
do. One so equipped can
be assured Of routing
Mara and his horde. So
let the forest glades delight
A wise man for his dwelling's site. This is the
commentary on the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits,
in the case of the forest-dweller's practice. [74] 56.
ix. The tree-root-dweller's practice is undertaken with
one of the following statements: 'I refuse a roof' or 'I undertake the
tree-root-dweller's practice'. The tree-root dweller
should avoid such trees as a tree near a frontier, a shrine tree, a gum
tree, a fruit tree, a bats' tree, a hollow tree, or a tree standing in
the middle of a monastery. He can choose a tree standing on the
outskirts of of a monastery. These are the
directions. 57. This has three grades too.
Herein, one who is strict is not allowed to have a tree that he has
chosen tidied up. He can move the fallen leaves with his foot while
dwelling there. The medium one is allowed to get it tidied up by those
who happen to come along. The mild one can take up residence there after
summoning monastery attendants and novices and getting them to clear it
up, level it, strew sand and make a fence round with a gate fixed in
it. On a special day a tree-root dweller should sit in
some concealed place elsewhere rather than there. The
moment any one of these three makes his abode under a roof, his ascetic
practice is broken. The Reciters of the Anguttara say that it is broken
as soon as he knowingly meets the dawn under a roof. This is the
breach in this instance. 58. The benefits
are these. He practices in conformity with the Dependence, because of
the words 'The Going Forth by depending on the root of a tree as an
abode' (Vin.i,58,96); it is a requisite recommended by the Blessed One
thus, 'Valueless, easy to get, and blameless' (A.ii,26); perception of
impermanence is aroused through seeing the continual alteration of young
leaves; avarice about abodes and love of [building] work are absent; he
dwells in the company of deities; he lives in conformity with [the
principles of] fewness of wishes, and so
on. 59. The Blessed One praised roots of
trees As one of
the Dependencies (Vin.i,58)
; Can he that loves
secludedness Find
such another dwelling
place? Secluded at
the roots of trees
And guarded well by deities
He lives in true
devotedness, Nor
covets any dwelling place. [75]
And when the
tender leaves are seen
Bright red at first, then turning green,
And then to yellow
as they fall He
sheds belief once and for all
In permanence.
Tree roots have been
Bequeathed by Him; secluded scene
No wise man will
disdain at all For
contemplating [Rise and Fall]. This is the commentary on
the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the case
of the tree-root-dweller's practice. 60. x. The
open-air-dweller's practice is undertaken with one of the
following statements: 'I refuse a roof and a tree root' or 'I undertake
the open-air-dweller's practice'. An open-air dweller is
allowed to enter the Uposatha-house for the purpose of hearing the
Dhamma or for the purpose of the Uposatha. If it rains while he is
inside, he can go out when the rain is over instead of going out while
it is still raining. He is allowed to enter the eating hall or the fire
room in order to do the duties, or to go under a roof in order to ask
elder bhikkhus in the eating hall about a meal, or when teaching and
taking lessons, or to take beds, chairs, etc., inside that have been
wrongly left outside. If he is going along a road with a requisite
belonging to a senior and it rains; he is allowed to go into a wayside
rest house. If he has nothing with him, he is not allowed to hurry in
order to get to a rest house; but he can go at his normal pace and enter
it and stay there as long as it rains. These are the directions
for it. And the same rule applies to the tree-root dweller
too. 61. This has three grades too. Herein, one
who is strict is not allowed to live near a tree or a rock or a house.
He should make a robe-tent right out in the open and live in that. The
medium one is allowed to live near a tree or a rock or a house so long
as he is not covered by them. The mild one is allowed these: a [rock]
overhang without a drip-ledge cut in it, {15} a hut of
branches, cloth stiffened with paste, and a tent treated as a fixture,
that has been left by field watchers, and so on. The
moment anyone of these three goes under a roof or to a tree root to
dwell there, [76] his ascetic practice is broken. The Reciters of the
Anguttara say that it is broken as soon as he knowingly meets the dawn
there. This is the breach in this case. 62. The
benefits are these: the impediment of dwellings is severed;
stiffness and torpor are expelled; his conduct deserves the praise 'Like
deer the bhikkhus live unattached and homeless' (S.i,199); he is
detached; he is [free to go in] any direction; he lives in conformity
with [the principles of] fewness of wishes, and so
on. 63. The open air provides a life
That aids the
homeless bhikkhu's strife,
Easy to get, and
leaves his mind
Alert as a deer, so he shall find
Stiffness and
torpor brought to halt.
Under the star-bejewelled
vault The moon and
sun furnish his light,
And concentration his delight.
The joy
seclusion's savour gives
He shall discover soon who lives
In open air; and
that is why The
wise prefer the open sky. This is the commentary on the
undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits, in the case of
the open-air-dweller's practice. 64. xi. The
charnel-ground-dweller's practice is undertaken with one
of the following statements: 'I refuse what is not a charnel ground,' or
'I undertake the charnel-ground-dweller's practice' .
Now the charnel-ground dweller should not live in some place just
because the people who built the village have called it 'the charnel
ground' for it is not a charnel ground unless a dead body has been burnt
on it. But as soon as one has been burnt on it it becomes a charnel
ground. And even if it has been neglected for a dozen years, it is so
still. 65. One who dwells there should not be the sort of
person who gets walks, pavilions, etc., built, has beds and chairs set
out and drinking and washing water kept ready, and preaches Dhamma; for
this ascetic practice is a momentous thing. Whoever goes to live there
should be diligent. And he should first inform the senior elder of the
Order or the king's local representative in order to prevent trouble.
When he walks up and down, he should do so looking at the pyre with half
an eye. [77] On his way to the charnel ground he should avoid the main
roads and take a by-path. He should define all the objects [there] while
it is day, so that they will not assume frightening shapes for him at
night. Even if non-human beings wander about screeching, he must not hit
them with anything. It is not allowed to miss going to the charnel
ground even for a single day. The Reciters of the Anguttara say that
after spending the middle watch in the charnel ground he is allowed to
leave in the last watch. He should not take such foods as sesamum flour,
pease pudding, fish, meat, milk, oil, sugar, etc., which are liked by
non-human beings. He should not enter the homes of families. {16} These are the
directions for it. 66. This has three
grades too. Herein, one who is strict should live where there are
always burnings and corpses and mourning. The medium one is allowed to
live where there is one of these three. The mild one is allowed to live
in a place that possesses the bare characteristics of a charnel ground
already stated. When any one of these three makes his
abode in some place not a charnel ground, his ascetic practice is
broken. It is on the day on which he does not go to the charnel ground,
the Anguttara Reciters say. This is the breach in this
case. 67. The benefits are these. He acquires
mindfulness of death; he lives diligently; the sign of foulness is
available (see Ch.VI); greed for sense desires is removed; he constantly
sees the body's true nature; he has a great sense of urgency; he
abandons vanity of health, etc.; he vanquishes fear and dread (see M.
Sutta 4); non-human beings respect and honour him, he lives in
conformity with [the principles of] fewness of wishes, and so
on. 68. Even in sleep the dweller in a
charnel ground shows naught
Of negligence, for death is ever present to his
thought; He may be sure
there is no lust after sense pleasure preys
Upon his mind, with many
corpses present to his gaze.
Rightly he strives because he gains a sense of urgency,
While in his search for
final peace he curbs all vanity.
Let him that feels a leaning to nibbana in his heart
Embrace this practice
for it has rare virtues to impart. This is the
commentary on the undertaking, direction, grades, breach, and benefits,
in the case of the charnel-ground dweller's practice. [78]
69. xii. The any-bed-user's practice is
undertaken with one of the following statements: 'I refuse greed
for resting places' or 'I undertake the any-bed-user's
practice'. The any-bed user should be content with
whatever resting place he gets thus: 'This falls to your lot'. He must
not make anyone else shift [from his bed]. These are the
directions. 70. This has three grades too.
Herein, one who is strict is not allowed to ask about the resting place
that has fallen to his lot 'Is it far?' or 'Is it too near?' or 'Is it
infested by nonhuman beings, snakes, and so on?' or 'Is it hot?' or 'Is
it cold?'. The medium one is allowed to ask, but not to go and inspect
it. The mild one is allowed to inspect it and, if he does not like it,
to choose another.' As soon as greed for resting places
arises in any one of these three, his ascetic practice is broken. This
is the breach in this instance. 71. The
benefits are these. The advice 'He should be content with what he
gets' (Ja.i,476; Vin.iv,259) is carried out; he regards the welfare of
his fellows in the life of purity; he gives up caring about inferiority
and superiority; approval and disapproval are abandoned; the door is
closed against excessive wishes; he lives in conformity with [the
principles) of fewness of wishes, and so
on. 72. One vowed to any bed will be
Content with what he
gets, and he Can
sleep in bliss without dismay
On nothing but a
spread of hay.
He is not eager for the
best, No lowly couch
does he detest, He
aids his young companions too
That to the monk's
good life are new.
So for a wise man to delight
In any kind of bed
is right; A Noble
One this custom loves
As one the Sage's Lord approves. This is the
commentary on the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits,
in the case of the any-bed-user's practice. 73. xiii. The
sitter's practice is undertaken with one of the following
statements: 'I refuse lying down' or 'I undertake the sitter's
practice'. The sitter can get up in any one of three
watches of the night and walk up and down; for lying down is the only
posture not allowed. These are the directions. [79]
74. This has three grades too. Herein, one who is
strict is not allowed a back-rest or cloth band or binding-strap [to
prevent falling while asleep]. {17} The medium
one is allowed any one of these three. The mild one is allowed a
back-rest, a cloth band, a binding-strap, a cushion, 'five-limb' and a
'seven-limb'. A 'five-limb' is [a chair] made with [four legs and] a
support for the back. A 'seven-limb' is one made with [four legs,] a
support for the back and an [arm] support on each side. They made that,
it seems, for the Elder Pithabhaya (Abhaya of the Chair). The Elder
became a Non-returner, and then attained nibbana. As
soon as any one of these three lies down, his ascetic practice is
broken. This is the breach in this instance. 75.
The benefits are these. The mental shackle described thus, 'He
dwells indulging in the pleasure of lying prone, the pleasure of
lolling, the pleasure of torpor' (M.i,102), is severed; his state is
suitable for devotion to any meditation subject; his deportment inspires
confidence; his state favours the application of energy; he develops the
right practice. 76. The adept that can place
crosswise His feet
to rest upon his thighs
And sit with back erect shall make
Foul Mara's evil
heart to quake.
No more in supine joys to
plump And wallow in
lethargic dump; Who
sits for rest and finds it good
Shines forth in the Ascetics'
Wood.
The
happiness and bliss it brings
Has naught to do with worldly
things; So must the
Sitter's Vow befit
The manners of a man of wit. This is the
commentary on the undertaking, directions, grades, breach, and benefits,
in the case of the sitter's practice. 77. Now there is
the commentary according to the
stanza: (4) As to the
Profitable Triad, (5)
'Ascetic' and so on distinguished,
(6) As to groups, and
also (7) singly, The
exposition should be known (see §3). 78. 4. Herein, as
to the Profitable Triad (see Dhs.p.1): all the ascetic practices,
that is to say, those of trainers, ordinary men, and men whose cankers
have been destroyed, may be either profitable or [in the Arahant's case]
indeterminate. [80] No ascetic practice is unprofitable. But if someone
should say: There is also an unprofitable ascetic practice because of
the words 'One of evil wishes, a prey to wishes, becomes a forest
dweller' (A.iii,219), etc., he should be told: We have not said that he
does not live in the forest with unprofitable consciousness. Whoever has
his dwelling in the forest is a forest dweller; and he may be one of
evil wishes or of few wishes. But, as it was said above (§11), they are
the practices (anga) of a bhikkhu who is ascetic (dhuta)
because he has shaken off (dhuta) defilement by undertaking one
or other of them. Or the knowledge that has got the name "ascetic
(dhuta)" because it shakes off (dhunana) defilement is a
practice (anga) belonging to these, thus they are "ascetic
practices (dhutanga)". Or alternatively, they are ascetic
(dhuta) because they shake off (niddhunana) opposition,
and they are practices (anga) because they are a way
(patipatti)'. Now no one called 'ascetic' on account of what is
unprofitable could have these as his practices; nor does what is
unprofitable shake off anything so that those things to which it
belonged as a practice could be called 'ascetic practices'. And what is
unprofitable does not both shake off cupidity for robes, etc., and
become the practice of the way. Consequently it was rightly said that no
ascetic practice is unprofitable. 79. And those who hold
that an ascetic practice is outside the Profitable Triad {18} have no
ascetic practice as regards meaning. Owing to the shaking off of what
could what is non-existent be called an ascetic practice? Also there are
the words 'Proceeded to undertake the ascetic qualities' (Vin.iii,15),
and it follows {19} that those
words are contradicted. So that should not be accepted.
This, in the first place, is the commentary on the Profitable
Triad. 80. 5. As to 'ascetic' and so on
distinguished; the following things should be understood, that is to
say, ascetic, a preacher of asceticism, ascetic states, ascetic
practices, and for whom the cultivation of ascetic practices is
suitable. 81. Herein, ascetic means either a
person whose defilements are shaken off, or a state that entails shaking
off defilements. A preacher of asceticism: one is
ascetic but not a preacher of asceticism, another is not ascetic but a
preacher of asceticism, another is neither ascetic nor a preacher of
asceticism, and another is both ascetic and a preacher of
asceticism. 82. Herein, one who has shaken off his
defilements with an ascetic practice but does not advise and instruct
another in an ascetic practice, like the Elder Bakkula, is 'ascetic but
not a preacher of asceticism', according as it is said 'Now the
venerable Bakkula was ascetic but not a preacher of asceticism'. One who
[81] has not shaken off his own defilements but only advises and
instructs another in an ascetic practice, like the Elder Upananda is
'not ascetic but a preacher of asceticism', according as it is said 'Now
the venerable Upananda son of the Sakyans was not ascetic but a preacher
of asceticism'. One who has failed in both, like Laludayin, is neither
ascetic nor a preacher of asceticism according as it is said 'Now the
venerable Laludayin was neither ascetic nor a preacher of asceticism'.
One who has succeeded in both, like the General of the Dhamma, is 'both
ascetic and a preacher of asceticism', according as it is said 'Now the
venerable Sariputta was ascetic and a preacher of
asceticism'. 81. Ascetic states: the five states
that go with the volition of an ascetic practice, that is to say,
fewness of wishes, contentment, effacement, seclusion, and that specific
quality {20} are called
'ascetic states' because of the words 'Depending on fewness of wishes'
(A.iii,219), and so on. 84. Herein, fewness of
wishes and contentment are non-greed. Effacement and
seclusion belong to the two states, nongreed and non-delusion.
That specific quality is knowledge. Herein, by means of non-greed
a man shakes off greed for things that are forbidden. By means of
non-delusion he shakes off the delusion that hides the dangers in those
same things. And by means of non-greed he shakes off indulgence in
pleasure due to sense desires that occurs under the heading of using
what is allowed. And by means of non-delusion he shakes off indulgence
in self mortification that occurs under the heading of excessive
effacement in the ascetic practices. That is why these states should be
understood as 'ascetic states'. 85. Ascetic
practices: these should be understood as the thirteen, that is to
say, the refuse-rag-wearer's practice, ... the sitter's practice, which
have already been described as to meaning and as to characteristic, and
so on. 86. For whom the cultivation of ascetic
practices is suitable: [they are suitable] for one of greedy
temperament and for one of deluded temperament. Why? Because the
cultivation of ascetic practices is both a difficult progress {21} and an
abiding in effacement; and greed subsides with the difficult progress,
while delusion is got rid of in those diligent by effacement. Or the
cultivation of the forest-dweller's practice and the tree-root-dweller's
practice here are suitable for one of hating temperament; for hate too
subsides in one who dwells there without coming into
conflict. This is the commentary 'as to "ascetic" and so
on distinguished'. [82] 87. 6. and 7. As to groups
and also singly. Now 6. as to groups: these ascetic practices
are in fact only eight, that is to say, three principal and five
individual practices. Herein, the three, namely, the
house-to-house-seeker's practice, the one-sessioner's practice, and the
open-air-dweller's practice, are principal practices. For one who keeps
the house-to-house-seeker's practice will keep the alms-food-eater's
practice; and the bowl-food-eater's practice and the
later-food-refuser's practice will be well kept by one who keeps the
one-sessioner's practice. And what need has one who keeps the
open-air-dweller's practice to keep the tree-root-dweller's practice or
the any-bed-user's practice? So there are these three principal
practices that, together with the five individual practices, that is to
say, the forest-dweller's practice, the refuse-rag-wearer's practice,
the triple-robe-wearer's practice, the sitter's practice, and the
charnel-ground-dweller's practice, come to eight
only. 88. Again they come to four, that is to say, two
connected with robes, five connected with alms food, five connected with
the resting place, and one connected with energy. Herein, it is the
sitter's practice that is connected with energy; the rest are
obvious. Again they all amount to two only, since twelve
are dependent on requisites and one on energy. Also they are two
according to what is and what is not to be cultivated. For when one
cultivating an ascetic practice finds that his meditation subject
improves, he should cultivate it; but when he is cultivating one and
finds that his meditation subject deteriorates, he should not cultivate
it. But when he finds that, whether he cultivates one or not, his
meditation subject only improves and does not deteriorate, he should
cultivate them out of compassion for later generation. And when he finds
that, whether he cultivates them or not, his meditation subject does not
improve, he should still cultivate them for the sake of acquiring the
habit for the future. So they are of two kinds as what is and what is
not to be cultivated. 89. And all are of one kind as volition.
For there is only one ascetic practice, namely, that conisting in the
volition of undertaking. Also it is said in the Commentary 'It is the
volition that is the ascetic practice, they say'. 90. 7.
Singly: with thirteen for bhikkhus, eight for bhikkhunis, twelve
for novices, seven for female probationers and female novices, and two
for male and female lay followers, there are thus
forty-two. 91. If there is a charnel ground in the open
that complies with the forest-dweller's practice, one bhikkhu is able to
put all the ascetic practices into effect simultaneously. But the two,
namely, the forest-dweller's practice and the later-food-refuser's
practice are forbidden to bhikkhunis by training precept. [83] And it is
hard for them to observe the three, namely, the open-air-dweller's
practice, the tree-root-dweller's practice, and the
charnel-ground-dweller's practice, because a bhikkhuni is not allowed to
live without a companion, and it is hard to find a female companion with
like desire for such a place, and even if available, she would not
escape having to live in company. This being so, the purpose of
cultivating the ascetic practice would scarcely be served. It is because
they are reduced by five owing to this inability to make use of certain
of them that they are to be understood as eight only for
bhikkhunis. 92. Except for the triple-robe-wearer's
practice all the other twelve as stated should bc understood to be for
novices, and all the other seven for female probationers and female
novices. The two, namely, the one-sessioner's practice
and the bowl-food-eater's practice, are proper for male and female lay
followers to employ. In this way there are two ascetic
practices. This is the commentary 'as to groups and also
singly'. 93. And this is the end of the treatise on the
ascetic practices to be undertaken for the purpose of perfecting those
special qualities of fewness of wishes, contentment, etc., by means of
which (there comes about the cleansing of virtue as described in the
Path of Purification, which is shown under the three headings of virtue,
concentration and understanding, contained in the
stanza, 'When a wise man,
established well in virtue' (Ch.1, §1).
The second chapter called the
'Description of
the Ascetic Practices' in the Path of
Purification
composed for the purpose of gladdening
good people.
[Footnotes]
{1} .
'Nibbacana - derivative name (or verbal derivative)'; gram. term
not in P.T.S.; see MA.i.61,105; Vis. Ch.XVI, §16.
{2} .
'Patati - to gather (or to wander)': not in P.T.S. Dict.
{3} .
'Avakkhandana - hiatus' and 'dana - gap': not in P.T.S.
Dict.
{4} . Such
references to 'the Commentary' are to the old Sinhalese commentary, no
longer extant, from which Bhadantacariya Buddhaghosa drew his material.
{5} .
'"Ekasangitika": one who knows one of the five Collections
(nikaya) beginning with the Collection of Long Discourses
(Digha-nikaya)'. (Pm.76).
{6} . 'That Elder,
it seems, was a sitter, but no one knew it. Then one night the other saw
him by the light of a flash of lightning sitting up on his bed. He asked
"Are you a sitter, venerable sir?". Out of fewness of wishes that his
ascetic practice should get known, the Elder lay down. Afterwards he
undertook the practice anew. So the story has come down' (Pm. 77).
{7} . 'The name of
a street in Mahagama (S.E. Ceylon). Also in Anuradhapura, they say' (Pm.
77).
{8} . On certain
occasions, when the Going Forth was given by the Buddha with only the
words 'Ehi bhikkhu (come, bhikkhu)', owing to the disciple's past
merit robes appeared miraculously upon him (see e.g. Vin.
Mahavagga, Kh.1).
{9} .
'Apadana - institution (or production)': not in P.T.S. Dict.
{10} .
'Tatra-tthaka-paccattharana - a bedspread that remains there': 'A
name for what has been determined upon as a bedspread in one's own
resting place or in someone else's. They say accordingly (it is said in
a commentary) that there is no breach of the ascetic practice even when
these two, that is, the bedspread and the undyed cloth, are kept as
extra robes' (Pm. 78-9). For tatratthaka (fixture) see also §61.
{11} . 'A meal to
be given by setting it out in a principal house only' (Pm.79). This
meaning of dhura-bhatta not in P.T.S. Dict.
{12} . 'Tickets
that are not for actual food, but deal with medicine, etc.' (Pm.79).
Patikkamana - refectory' (§28) = bojun hal (eating hall)'
in Sinhalese translation.
{13} .
'Sakkara - sugar'.: spelt sakkhara in P.T.S: Dict.
{14} .
'Subbata - truly devoted ': fm. su + vata (having good
vows). See also §59.
{15} . Reading
acchinna-mariyadam with Pm., which says "Without a dripledge
cut (acchinnamariyadam)" means without a drip-ledge
(mariyada) made above, which might come under the heading of a
dripledge (mariyadasankhepena) made to prevent rain water from
coming in. But if the rain water comes under the overhang
(pabbhara) and is allowed to go in under it, then this comes
under the heading of the open air (abbhokasikasankhepa)' (Pm.84).
This seems to refer to the widespread habit in ancient Ceylon of cutting
a drip-ledge on overhanging rocks used for bhikkhu's dwellings so that
the rain that falls on top of the rock drips down in front of the space
under the overhang instead of trickling down under the rock and wetting
the back and floor. Pabbhara in this context is 'overhang' rather
than' slope' .
{16} . 'He should
not go into families' houses because he smells of the dead and is
followed by Pisaca goblins' (Pm.84).
{17} .
'Ayogapatta - a binding-strap': this is probably the meaning. But
cf. Vin.ii,135 and VinA.891.
{18} . For the
triads of the Abhidhamma Matika (Abhidhamma Schedule) see Ch.
XIII,n.20. '"Those who hold": a reference to the
inhabitants of the Abhayagiri Monastery at Anuradhapura. For they say
that ascetic practice is a concept consisting in a name
(nama-pannatti). That being so, they could have no meaning of
shaking off defilements, or possibility of being undertaken, because in
the ultimate sense they would be nonexistent [concepts having no
existence]' (Pm.87). Cf. Ch.IV,§29
{19} .
Apajjati (and its noun apatti) is the normal word used for
undesirable consequences that follow on some unsound logical
proposition. See Ch.XVI, §68f. This meaning not in P.T.S. Dict.
{20} .
'Idamatthita - That specific quality': 'Owing to these profitable
states it exists, (thus it is "specific by those" imehi
kusaladhammehi atthi = idam-atthi). The knowledge by means of which
one who has gone forth should be established in the refuse-rag-wearer's
practice, etc., and by means of which, on being so instructed, one
undertakes and persits in the ascetic qualities - that knowledge is
idamatthita' (Pm.88).
{21} . See
Ch.XXI,§117.
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