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            Buddhist Meditation
             Francis 
            Story(The 
            Anagarika
            
            Sugatananda)
             --o0o--
           
          The mental exercise known 
          as meditation is found in all religious systems. Prayer is a form of 
          discursive meditation, and in Hinduism the reciting of slokas and 
          mantras is employed to tranquilize the mind to a state of receptivity. 
          In most of these systems the goal is identified with the particular 
          psychic results that ensue, sometimes very quickly; and the visions 
          that come in the semi-trance state, or the sounds that are heard, are 
          considered to be the end-result of the exercise. This is not the case 
          in the forms of meditation practiced in Buddhism. 
          There is still 
          comparatively little known about the mind, its functions and its 
          powers, and it is difficult for most people to distinguish between 
          self-hypnosis, the development of mediumistic states, and the real 
          process of mental clarification and direct perception which is the 
          object of Buddhist mental concentration. The fact that mystics of 
          every religion have induced on themselves states wherein they see 
          visions and hear voices that are in accordance with their own 
          religious beliefs indicates that their meditation has resulted only in 
          bringing to the surface of the mind and objectifying the concepts 
          already embedded in the deepest strata of their subconscious minds. 
          The Christian sees and converses with the saints of whom he already 
          knows; the Hindu visualizes the gods of the Hindu pantheon, and so on. 
          When Sri Ramakrishna 
          Paramahamsa, 
          the Bengali mystic, began to turn his thoughts towards Christianity, 
          he saw visions of Jesus in his meditations, in place of his former 
          eidetic images of the Hindu Avatars. 
          The practiced hypnotic 
          subject becomes more and more readily able to surrender himself to the 
          suggestions made to him by the hypnotiser, and anyone who has studied 
          this subject is bound to see a connection between the mental state of 
          compliance he has reached and the facility with which the mystic can 
          induce whatever kind of experiences he wills himself to undergo. There 
          is still another possibility latent in the practice of meditation; the 
          development of mediumistic faculties by which the subject can actually 
          see and hear beings on different planes of existence, the Devalokas 
          and the realm of the unhappy ghosts, for example. These worlds being 
          nearest to our own are the more readily accessible, and this is the 
          true explanation of the psychic phenomena of Western Spiritualism.
          
          The object of Buddhist 
          meditation, however, is none of these things. They arise as 
          side-products, but not only are they not its goal, but they are 
          hindrances which have to be overcome. The Christian who has seen 
          Jesus, or the Hindu who has conversed with Bhagavan Krishna may be 
          quite satisfied that he has fulfilled the purpose of his religious 
          life, but the Buddhist who sees a vision of the Buddha knows by that 
          very fact that he has only succeeded in objectifying a concept in his 
          own mind, for the Buddha after his Parinibbana is, in his own words, 
          no longer visible to gods or men. 
          There is an essential 
          difference, then, between Buddhist meditation and concentration and 
          that practiced in other systems. The Buddhist embarking on a course of 
          meditation does well to recognize this difference and to establish in 
          his own conscious mind a clear idea of what it is he is trying to do.
          
          The root-cause of rebirth 
          and suffering is avijja conjoined with and reacting upon 
          tanha. These two causes form a vicious circle; on the one hand, 
          concepts, the result of ignorance, and on the other hand, desire 
          arising from concepts. The world of phenomena has no meaning beyond 
          the meaning given to it by our own interpretation. 
          When that interpretation is 
          conditioned by avijja, we are subject to the state known as 
          vipallasa, or hallucination. Sañña-vipallasa, hallucination 
          of perception; citta-vipallasa, hallucination of consciousness, 
          and ditthi-vipallasa, hallucination of views, cause us to 
          regard that which is impermanent (anicca) as permanent, that 
          which is painful (dukkha) as a source of pleasure, and that 
          which is unreal (anatta), or literally without any self 
          existence, as being a real, self-existing entity. Consequently, we 
          place a false interpretation on all the sensory experiences we gain 
          through the six channels of cognition, that is, the eye, ear, nose, 
          tongue, sense of touch and mind cakkhu, sota, 
          ghana, 
          jivha, kaya and
          mano (ayatana). Physics, by showing that the realm of phenomena 
          we know through these channels of cognition does not really correspond 
          to the physical world known to science, has confirmed this Buddhist 
          truth. We are deluded by our own senses. Pursuing what we imagine to 
          be desirable, an object of pleasure, we are in reality only following 
          a shadow, trying to grasp a mirage. It is anicca, dukkha, anatta 
          -- impermanent, associated with suffering, an insubstantial. Being so, 
          it can only be the cause of impermanence, suffering and 
          insubstantiality, since like begets like; and we ourselves, who chase 
          the illusion, are also impermanent, subject to suffering and without 
          any persistent ego-principle. It is a case of a shadow pursuing a 
          shadow. 
          The purpose of Buddhist 
          meditation, therefore, is to gain more than an intellectual 
          understanding of this truth, to liberate ourselves from the delusion 
          and thereby put an end to both ignorance and craving. If the 
          meditation does not produce results tending to this consummation -- 
          results which are observable in the character and the whole attitude 
          to life -- it is clear that there is something wrong either with the 
          system or with the method of employing it. It is not enough to see 
          lights, to have visions or to experience ecstasy. These phenomena are 
          too common to be impressive to the Buddhist who really understands the 
          purpose of Buddhist meditation. There are actual dangers in them which 
          are apparent to one who is also a student of psychopathology. 
          
          In the Buddha's great 
          discourse on the practice of mindfulness, the Maha-Satipatthana Sutta, 
          both the object and the means of attaining it are clearly set forth. 
          Attentiveness to the movements of the body, to the ever-changing 
          states of the mind, is to be cultivated in order that their real 
          nature should be known. Instead of identifying these physical and 
          mental phenomena with the false concept of "self," we are to see them 
          as they really are: movements of a physical body, an aggregate of the 
          four elements, (mahabhutas) subject to physical laws of 
          causality on the one hand, and on the other, a flux of successive 
          phases of consciousness arising and passing away in response to 
          external stimuli. They are to be viewed objectively, as though they 
          were processes not associated with ourselves but belonging to another 
          order of phenomena. 
          From what can selfishness 
          and egotism proceed if not from the concept of "self" 
          (sakkayaditthi)? If the practice of any form of meditation leaves 
          selfishness or egotism unabated, it has not been successful. A tree is 
          judged by its fruits and a man by his actions; there is no other 
          criterion. Particularly is this true in Buddhist psychology, because 
          the man is his actions. In the truest sense they, or the 
          continuity of kamma and vipaka which they represent, are the 
          only claim he can make to any persistent identity, not only through 
          the different phases of this life but also from one life to another. 
          Attentiveness with regard to body and mind serves to break down the 
          illusion of self; and not only that, it also cuts off craving and 
          attachment to external objects, so that ultimately there is neither 
          the "self" that craves nor any object of craving. It is a long and 
          arduous discipline, and one that can only be undertaken in retirement 
          from the world and its cares. 
          Yet even a temporary 
          retirement, a temporary course of this discipline, can bear good 
          results in that it establishes an attitude of mind which can be 
          applied to some degree in the ordinary situations of life. Detachment, 
          objectivity, is an invaluable aid to clear thinking; it enables a man 
          to sum up a given situation without bias, personal or otherwise, and 
          to act in that situation with courage and discretion. Another gift it 
          bestows is that of concentration -- the ability to focus the mind and 
          keep it steadily fixed on a single point (ekaggata, or 
          one-pointedness), and this is the great secret of success in any 
          undertaking. The mind is hard to tame; it roams here and there 
          restlessly as the wind, or like an untamed horse, but when it is fully 
          under control, it is the most powerful instrument in the whole 
          universe. He who has mastered his own mind is indeed master of the 
          Three Worlds. 
          In the first place he is 
          without fear. Fear arises because we associate mind and body 
          (nama-rupa) with "self"; consequently any harm to either is 
          considered to be harm done to oneself. But he who has broken down this 
          illusion by realizing that the five khandha process is merely 
          the manifestation of cause and effect, does not fear death or 
          misfortune. He remains equable alike in success and failure, 
          unaffected by praise or blame. The only thing he fears is 
          demeritorious action, because he knows that no thing or person in the 
          world can harm him except himself, and as his detachment increases, he 
          becomes less and less liable to demeritorious deeds. Unwholesome 
          action comes of an unwholesome mind, and as the mind becomes purified, 
          healed of its disorders, bad kamma ceases to accumulate. He comes to 
          have a horror of wrong action and to take greater and greater delight 
          in those deeds that are rooted in alobha, adosa, and 
          amoha -- generosity, benevolence and wisdom. 
           
          Anapana Sati
          One of the most 
          universally-applicable methods of cultivating mental concentration is
          anapanasati, attentiveness on the in-going and out-going 
          breath. This, unlike the Yogic systems, does not call for any 
          interference with the normal breathing, the breath being merely used 
          as a point on which to fix the attention, at the tip of the nostrils. 
          The attention must not wander, even to follow the breath, but must be 
          kept rigidly on the selected spot. In the initial stages it is 
          advisable to mark the respiration by counting, but as soon as it is 
          possible to keep the mind fixed without this artificial aid, it should 
          be discontinued and only used when it is necessary to recall the 
          attention. 
          As the state of mental 
          quiescence (samatha) is approached, the breath appears to 
          become fainter and fainter, until it is hardly discernible. It is at 
          this stage that certain psychic phenomena appear, which may at first 
          be disconcerting. A stage is reached when the actual bodily dukkha, 
          the sensation of arising and passing away of the physical elements in 
          the body, is felt. This is experienced as a disturbance, but it must 
          be remembered that it is an agitation that is always present in the 
          body but we are unaware of it until the mind becomes stabilized. It is 
          the first direct experience of the dukkha (suffering) which is 
          inherent in all phenomena -- the realization within oneself of the 
          first of the Four Noble Truths, Dukkha 
          Ariya Sacca. 
          When that is passed there follows the sensation of piti, 
          rapturous joy associated with the physical body. The teacher of 
          vipassana, however, is careful never to describe to his pupil 
          beforehand what he is likely to experience, for if he does so, there 
          is a strong possibility that the power of suggestion will produce a 
          false reaction, particularly in those cases where the pupil is very 
          suggestible and greatly under the influence of the teacher. 
          
           
          Devices in Meditation
          In kammattana, it is 
          permissible to use certain devices, such as the earth or colour 
          kasina, as focal points for the attention. A candle flame, a hole 
          in the wall, or some metal object can also be used, and the method of 
          using them is found in the Pali texts and the Visuddhi-magga. 
          In the texts themselves it is to be noted that the Buddha gave objects 
          of meditation to disciples in accordance with their individual 
          characteristics, and his unerring knowledge of the right technique for 
          each came from his insight into their previous births. Similarly with 
          recursive meditation, a subject would be given which was easily 
          comprehensible to the pupil, or which served to counteract some 
          strong, unwholesome tendency in his nature. Thus, to one attracted by 
          sensual indulgence, the Buddha would recommend meditation on the 
          impurity of the body, or the "cemetery meditation." Here the object is 
          to counterbalance attraction by repulsion, but it is only a "skillful 
          means" to reach the final state, in which attraction and repulsion 
          both cease to exist. In the Arahant there is neither liking nor 
          disliking: he regards all things with perfect equanimity, as did Thera 
          Maha Moggallana 
          when he accepted a handful of rice from a leper. 
          Beads
          The use of the rosary in 
          Buddhism is often misunderstood. If it is used for the mechanical 
          repetition of a set formula, the repeating of so many phrases as an 
          act of piety, as in other religions, its value is negligible. When it 
          is used as means of holding the attention and purifying the mind, 
          however, it can be a great help. One of the best ways of employing it, 
          because it calls for undivided attention, is to repeat the Pali 
          formula of the qualities of Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha, beginning 
          "Iti'pi so Bhagava -- " with the first bead, starting again with 
          the second and continuing to the next quality: "Iti'pi so Bhagava, 
          Arahan -- " and so on until with the last bead the entire formula 
          is repeated from beginning to end. This cannot be carried out 
          successfully unless the mind is entirely concentrated on what is being 
          done. At the same time the recalling of the noble qualities of Buddha, 
          Dhamma and Sangha lifts the mind to a lofty plane, since the words 
          carry with them a meaning the impresses itself on the pattern of the 
          thought-moments as they arise and pass away. The value of this in 
          terms of Abhidhamma psychology lies in the wholesome nature of the 
          cittakkhana, or "consciousness-moment" in its uppada 
          (arising), thiti (static) and bhanga (disappearing) 
          phases. Each of these wholesome cittakkhana contributes to the 
          improvement of the sankhara; or aggregate of tendencies; in 
          other words, it directs the subsequent thought-moments into a higher 
          realm and tends to establish the character on that level. 
                       
          Samatha Bhavana
          Samatha bhavana, 
          the development of mental tranquillity with concentration, is 
          accompanied by three benefits; it gives happiness in the present life, 
          a favorable rebirth, and the freedom from mental defilements which is 
          a prerequisite for attainment of insight. In samatha the mind 
          becomes like a still, clear pool completely free from disturbance and 
          agitation, and ready to mirror on its surface the nature of things as 
          they really are, the aspect of them which is hidden from ordinary 
          knowledge by the restlessness of craving. It is the peace and 
          fulfillment which is depicted on the features of the Buddha, investing 
          his images with a significance that impresses even those who have no 
          knowledge of what it means. Such an image of the Buddha can itself be 
          a very suitable object of meditation, and is, in fact, the one that 
          most Buddhists instinctively use. The very sight of the tranquil image 
          can calm and pacify a mind distraught with worldly hopes and fears. It 
          is the certain and visible assurance of Nibbana. 
          Vipassana Bhavana
          Vipassana bhavana 
          is realization of the three signs of being, anicca, dukkha, 
          and anatta, by direct insight. These three characteristics, 
          impermanence, suffering and non-self, can be grasped intellectually, 
          as scientific and philosophical truth, but this is not in itself 
          sufficient to rid the mind of egoism and craving. The final objective 
          lies on a higher level of awareness, the direct "intuitional" plane, 
          where it is actually experienced as psychological fact. Until this 
          personal confirmation is obtained, the sphere of sense perception 
          (ayatana) and sensory-responses remain stronger than the 
          intellectual conviction; the two function side by side on different 
          levels of consciousness, but it is usually the sphere dominated by 
          avijja which continues to determine the course of life by 
          volitional action. The philosopher who fails to live according to his 
          philosophy is the most familiar example of this incompatibility 
          between theory and practice. When the direct perception is obtained, 
          however, what was at its highest intellectual level still merely a 
          theory becomes actual knowledge, in precisely the same way that we 
          "know" when we are hot or cold hungry or thirsty. The mind that has 
          attained it is established in the Dhamma, and pañña, wisdom, 
          has taken the place of delusion. 
          Discursive meditation, such 
          as that practiced in Christian devotion, is entirely on the mental 
          level, and can be undertaken by anyone at any time. It calls for no 
          special preparation or conditions. For the more advanced exercises of
          samatha and vipassana, however, the strictest observance 
          of sila, the basic moral rules, becomes necessary. These 
          techniques are best followed in seclusion, away from the impurities of 
          worldly life and under the guidance of an accomplished master. Many 
          people have done themselves psychic harm by embarking on them without 
          due care in this respect. It is not advisable for anyone to experiment 
          on his own; those who are unable to place themselves under a 
          trustworthy teacher will do best to confine themselves to discursive 
          meditation. It cannot take them to enlightenment but will benefit them 
          morally and prepare them for the next stage. 
                       
          The Practice of Metta Bhavana
          Metta bhavana 
          is the most universally beneficial form of discursive meditation, and 
          can be practiced in any conditions. Thoughts of universal, 
          undiscriminating benevolence, like radio waves reaching out in all 
          directions, sublimate the creative energy of the mind. With steady 
          perseverance in metta bhavana a point can be reached at which 
          it becomes impossible even to harbor a thought of ill-will. True peace 
          can only come to the world through minds that are at peace, If people 
          everywhere in the world could be persuaded to devote half an hour 
          daily to the practice of metta bhavana, we should see more real 
          advance towards world peace and security than international agreements 
          will ever bring us. It would be a good thing if, in this new era of 
          the Buddha Sasana, people of all creeds could be invited to take part 
          in a world-wide movement for the practice of metta bhavana and 
          pledge themselves to live in accordance with the highest tenets of 
          their own religion, whatever it may be. In so doing they would be 
          paying homage to the Supreme Buddha and to their own particular 
          religious teacher as well, for on this level all the great religions 
          of the world unite. If there is a common denominator to be found among 
          them, it is surely here, in the teaching of universal loving-kindness 
          which transcends doctrinal differences and draws all being together by 
          the power of a timeless and all-embracing truth. 
          The classic formulation of
          metta as an attitude of mind to be developed by meditation is 
          found in the Karaniya Metta Sutta (Sutta Nipata, 
          Khuddaka-patha) [See appendix]. It is recommended that this sutta be 
          recited before beginning meditation, and again at its close, a 
          practice which is invariably followed in the Buddhist countries. The 
          verses of the sutta embody the highest concept to which the thought of 
          loving-kindness can reach, and it serves both as a means of 
          self-protection against unwholesome mental states and as a subject of 
          contemplation (kammatthana). 
          It is taught in Buddhism 
          that the cultivation of benevolence must begin with oneself. There is 
          a profound psychological truth in this, for no one who hates or 
          despises himself consciously or unconsciously can feel true 
          loving-kindness for others. To each of us the self is the nearest 
          object; if one's attitude towards oneself is not a wholesome one, the 
          spring of love is poisoned at its source. This does not mean that we 
          should build up an idealized picture of ourselves as an object of 
          admiration, but that, while being fully aware of our faults and 
          deficiencies, we should not condemn but resolve to improve ourselves 
          and cherish confidence in our ability to do so. 
                      
          Metta bhavana, therefore, begins with the thought: "May I be 
          free from enmity; may I be free from ill-will; may I be rid of 
          suffering; may I be happy." 
          This thought having been 
          developed, the next stage is to apply it in exactly the same form and 
          to the same degree, to someone for whom one has naturally a feeling of 
          friendship. 
          In so doing, two points 
          must be observed: the object should be a living person, and should not 
          be one of the opposite sex. The second prohibition is to guard against 
          the feeling of metta turning into its "near enemy," sensuality. 
          Those whose sensual leanings have a different orientation must vary 
          the rule to suit their own needs. 
          When the thought of 
          metta has been developed towards a friend, the next object should 
          be someone towards whom one has no marked feelings of like or dislike. 
          Lastly, the though of metta is to be turned towards someone who 
          is hostile. It is here that difficulties arise. They are to be 
          expected, and the meditator must be prepared to meet and wrestle with 
          them. To this end, several techniques are described in the 
          Visuddhimagga and elsewhere. The first is to think of the hostile 
          personality in terms of anatta -- impersonality. The meditator 
          is advised to analyze the hostile personality into its impersonal 
          components -- the body, the feelings, the perceptions, the volitional 
          formations and the consciousness. The body, to begin with, consists of 
          purely material items: hair of the head, hair of the body, skin, 
          nails, teeth and so on. There can be no basis for enmity against 
          these. The feelings, perceptions, volitional formations and 
          consciousness are all transitory phenomena, interdependent, 
          conditioned and bound up with suffering. They are anicca, 
          dukkha and anatta, impermanent, fraught with suffering and 
          void of selfhood. There is no more individual personality in them than 
          there is in the physical body itself. So towards them, likewise, there 
          can be no real ground for enmity. 
          If this approach should 
          prove to be not altogether effective, there are others in which 
          emotionally counteractive states of mind are brought into play, as for 
          example regarding the hostile person with compassion. The meditator 
          should reflect: "As he (or she) is, so am I. As I am, so is he. We are 
          both bound to the inexorable Wheel of Life by ignorance and craving. 
          Both of us are subject to the law of cause and effect, and whatever 
          evil we do, for that we must suffer. Why then should I blame or call 
          anyone my enemy? Rather should I purify my mind and wish that he may 
          do the same, so that both of us may be freed from suffering." 
          
          If this thought is dwelt 
          upon and fully comprehended, feelings of hostility will be cast out. 
          When the thought of loving-kindness is exactly the same, in quality 
          and degree, for all these four objects -- oneself, one's friend, the 
          person toward whom one is neutral, and the enemy -- the meditation has 
          been successful. 
          The next stage is to widen 
          and extend it. This process is a threefold one: suffusing metta 
          without limitation, suffusing it with limitation, and suffusing it in 
          all of the ten directions, east, west, north, south, the intermediate 
          points, above and below. 
          In suffusing metta 
          without limitation (anodhiso-pharana), the meditator thinks of 
          the objects of loving-kindness under five heads: all sentient beings; 
          all things that have life; all beings that have come into existence; 
          all that have personality; all that have assumed individual being. For 
          each of these groups separately he formulates the thought: "May they 
          be free from enmity; may they be free from enmity; may they be free 
          from ill will; may they be rid of suffering; may they be happy. For 
          each object he specifies the particular group which he is suffusing 
          with metta: "May all sentient beings be free from enmity, 
          etc... May all things that have life be free from enmity, etc." This 
          meditation embraces all without particular reference to locality, and 
          so is called "suffusing without limitation." 
          In suffusing metta 
          with limitation (odhiso-pharana), there are seven groups which 
          form the objects of the meditation. They are: all females; all males; 
          all Noble Ones (those who have attained any one of the states of 
          Sainthood); all imperfect ones; all Devas; all human beings; all 
          beings in states of woe. Each of the groups should be meditated upon 
          as described above: "May all females be free from enmity, etc." This 
          method is called "suffusing metta with limitation" because it 
          defines the groups according to their nature and condition. 
          
          Suffusing with metta 
          all beings in the ten directions is carried out in the same way. 
          Directing his mind towards the east, the meditator concentrates on the 
          thought: "May all beings in the east be free from enmity; may they be 
          free from ill will; may they be rid of suffering; may they be happy!" 
          And so with the beings in the west, the north, the south, the 
          north-east, south-west, north-west, south-east, above and below.
          
          Lastly, each of the twelve 
          groups belonging to the unlimited and limited suffusions of metta 
          can be dealt with separately for each of the ten directions, using the 
          appropriate formulas. 
          It is taught that each of 
          these twenty-two modes of practicing metta bhavana is capable 
          of being developed up to the stage of a appana-samadhi, that 
          is, the concentration which leads to jhana, or mental absorption. For 
          this reason it is described as the method for attaining release of the 
          mind through metta (metta cetovimutti). It is the first 
          of the Four Brahma Viharas, the sublime states of which the Karaniya 
          Metta Sutta: "Brahmam etam viharam idhamahu" -- "Here is 
          declared the Highest Life." 
          Metta, karuna, mudita, 
          upekkha: [see 
          Nyanaponika Thera,
          The Four Sublime States, Wheel 6.] loving-kindness, compassion, 
          sympathetic joy and detachment, these four states of mind represent 
          the highest levels of mundane consciousness. One who has attained to 
          them and dwells in them is impervious to the ills of life. Like a god 
          he moves and acts in undisturbed serenity, armored against the blows 
          of fate and the uncertainty of worldly conditions. And the first of 
          them to be cultivated is metta, because it is through boundless 
          love that the mind gains its first taste of liberation. 
                       
          Appendix
          Lovingkindness as a 
          Contemplation
                      
          
          Metta 
          Sutta
          From the 
          Sutta Nipata, verses 143-52 (Spoken by the 
          Buddha)
          
          What should be done by one 
          skillful in goodSo as to gain the State of 
          Peace 
          is this:
          Let him be able, and 
          upright, and straight.Easy to speak to, gentle, and not proud,
 Contented, too, supported easily.
 With few tasks, and living very lightly,
 His faculties serene, prudent, and modest,
 Unswayed by the emotions of the clans;
 And let him never do the slightest thing
 That other wise men might hold blamable.
(And let him think:) "In safety and in blissMay creatures all be of a blissful heart.
 Whatever breathing beings there may be,
 No matter whether they are frail or firm,
 With none excepted, be they long or big
 Or middle sized, or be they short or small
 Or thick, as well as those seen or unseen,
 Or whether they are dwelling far or near,
 Existing or yet seeking to exist,
 May creatures all be of a blissful heart.
          Let no one work another 
          one's undoingOr even slight him at all anywhere;
 And never let them wish each other ill
 Through provocation or resentful thought."
          And just as might a mother 
          with her lifeProtect the son that was her only child,
 So let him then for every living thing
 Maintain unbounded consciousness in being,
 And let him too with love for all the world
 Maintain unbounded consciousness in being
 Above, below, and all round in between,
 Untroubled, with no enemy or foe.
 And while he stands or walks or while he sits
 Or while he lies down, free from drowsiness,
 Let him resolve upon this mindfulness
 This is Divine Abiding here, they say.
 But when he has no trafficking with views,
 Is virtuous, and has perfected seeing,
 And purges greed for sensual desires.
 He surely comes no more to any womb.
           
          
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          Buddhist Publication SocietyP.O. Box 
          61
 54, Sangharaja 
          
          Mawatha
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          Sri Lanka
          
          This electronic edition was transcribed from the print edition in 1995 
          by Myra Fox under the auspices of the DharmaNet Dharma Book 
          Transcription Project, with the kind permission of the Buddhist 
          Publication Society.  |  |