The Brahmin


Strive, O Brahmin! Seal up the current (of craving),

cast away all pleasures of the senses. Knowing how to

uproot the elements of existence you shall know the

Uncreated.

When the Brahmin has attained the summit of the two

paths (concentration and insight), all bonds fall away

and he possesses the Knowledge.

One for whom neither the inner nor the outer exist,

neither one nor the other, who is free from fear and

bondage, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who is given to meditation and is freed of impu-

rities, who is without stain, who has fulfilled his duty,

who has attained the highest goal, him I consider to

be a Brahmin.

By day the sun shines; by night the moon. In his

armour the warrior shines; in meditation the Brahmin

shines. Day and night, without ceasing, the Buddha is

radiant.

The man who has rejected evil is a Brahmin. One

whose behaviour is disciplined is a monk; an ascetic

is one who is purged of impurities.

One should not strike a Brahmin, and the Brahmin

should not strike back. Shame on one who strikes a

Brahmin. Shame on the Brahmin who strikes back.

For a Brahmin there is nothing better than to restrain

the mind from the pleasures of life. As he removes

Page – 293


bad intentions, so he appeases his sufferings.

One who does no evil by act, word or thought, the

man who is restrained in these three, him I consider

to be a Brahmin.

Whosoever teaches you the Doctrine of the Perfectly

Enlightened One, render him homage and venerate

him as the Brahmin does the sacred fire.

Neither by matted hair, nor ancestry, nor by birth

does one become a Brahmin. One in whom abide truth

and righteousness, he is pure, he is a true Brahmin.

What value has your matted hair, O foolish man?

What value has the antelope skin you wear? Within

you lies a jungle of passions, you have only the ap-

pearance of purity.

The man dressed in cast-off robes, who is emaciated,

whose veins stand out on his body, who meditates

alone in the forest, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

But I do not call him a Brahmin, although he is of

brahmin origin or born of a brahmin mother, he who

is rich and arrogant. He who possesses nothing, who

is attached to nothing, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

He who has broken all bonds, who no longer fears

anything, who has overcome all ties, who is liberated,

him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who little by little has broken the thong (of mind)

and the straps (of attachment), who has cut the chain

(of doubt) with its links (of evil tendencies) and who

Page – 294


has rejected the yoke (of ignorance), who is enlight-

ened, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

He who is without resentment, who bears reproaches,

blows and chains, whose patience is his true strength,

him I consider to be a Brahmin.

He who is free from anger, who is faithful to his faith,

good and without craving, who has mastered himself

and taken a body for the last time, him I consider to

be a Brahmin.

He who is no more attached to the pleasures of the

senses than a drop of water to the lotus leaf, or a

mustard seed to the point of a needle, him I consider

to be a Brahmin.

He who, in this life, has realised the cessation of suf-

fering, who has laid down the burden and has libe-

rated himself (from the yoke of attachment), him I

consider to be a Brahmin.

The intelligent man, gifted with profound wisdom, dis-

cerning the good and the evil path, who has attained

the supreme goal, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who seeks the company neither of householders

nor of monks, who has no home and few needs, him

I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who does no harm to any creature, whether

strong or weak, who does not kill nor cause to be

killed, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

Friendly amid the unfriendly, calm amid the violent,

Page – 295


unselfish amid the selfish, him I consider to be a

Brahmin.

He from whom passion and hatred, pride and pre-

tence have fallen away, as a mustard seed falls from

the point of a needle, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who speaks only words that are sweet, instruc-

tive, true, and who offends no one, him I consider to

be a Brahmin.

One who in this world takes nothing but what he is

given, whether it be little or much, short or long, good

or bad, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who has no more desires in this world or the

other, who has no more craving, who is free, him I

consider to be a Brahmin.

One in whom desire exists no more, one who has

attained the perfection of knowledge, who has cast

away all doubt and who has sounded the depths of

immortality, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who in this world has broken all ties (of good and

evil) and who is delivered from grief, from taints and

impurities, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who, like the moon, is spotless, pure, clear, se-

rene, from whom the thirst of earthly desires has va-

nished, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who has escaped from the cycle of births, this

muddy path, this thorny road, and who has attained

the other shore, is given to meditation, void of desire,

Page – 296


free from doubt, detached from all things and at

peace, him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One in whom all passion is destroyed and who, re-

nouncing worldly pleasures, has left the household life

and taken to the homeless life, him I consider to be

a Brahmin. 

He in whom all craving is dead and who, renouncing

worldly pleasures, has left the household life, who has

quenched the thirst of becoming, him I consider to be

a Brahmin.

One who has rejected all earthly ties and has gone

beyond all heavenly ties, who is delivered from all ties,

him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who has put aside liking and disliking, who

is indifferent, who is freed from all attachment and all

fetters, who has conquered all the worlds, this hero I

consider to be a Brahmin.

He who possesses the perfect knowledge of the birth

and death of all beings and who is freed from all ties,

he is a Blessed One, an Awakened One, him I con-

sider to be a Brahmin.

He whose future state is unknown to the gods, the

demigods and mortals, who is without desire and with-

out impurity, who has become an adept, him I con-

sider to be a Brahmin.

He who no longer possesses anything, neither past nor

present nor future, who owns nothing, who no longer

clings to anything, that one I consider to be a Brahmin.

Page – 297


The Noble, the Excellent, the Hero, the great Sage,

the Victor, the Impassive, the Pure, the Enlightened,

him I consider to be a Brahmin.

One who knows his previous lives, one who perceives

the heavens and the hells, who has come to the end

of births, who has attained perfect vision, the Sage

accomplished in all accomplishments, him in truth I

consider to be a Brahmin.


Such is the conclusion of the Dhammapada and if we have put into practice--to use its image--only a mustard seed of all that has been taught to us, well, we have not wasted our time.

There is one thing which is not spoken of here, in the Dhammapada: a supreme disinterestedness and a supreme liberation is to follow the discipline of self-perfection, the march of progress, not with a precise end in view as described here, the liberation of Nirvana, but because this march of progress is the profound law and the purpose of earthly life, the truth of universal existence and because you put yourself in harmony with it, spontaneously, whatever the result may be.

There is a deep trust in the divine Grace, a total surrender to the divine Will, an integral adhesion to the divine Plan which makes one do the thing to be done without concern for the result. That is the perfect liberation.

That is truly the abolition of suffering. The consciousness is filled with an unchanging delight and each step you take reveals a marvel of splendour.

We are grateful to the Buddha for what he has brought for human progress and, as I told you at the beginning, we shall try to realise a little of all the beautiful things he has taught us, but we shall leave the goal and the result of our endeavour to the Supreme Wisdom that surpasses all understanding.

5 September 1958

*

Page – 298