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When I lived in a house
"When I lived in a house
I heard a monk's words
and saw in those words
nirvana
the unchanging state.
I am the one
who left son and daughter,
money and grain,
cut off my hair
and set out into homelessness.
Under training
on the straight way,
desire and hatred fell away,
along with the obsessions
of the mind
that combine with them.
After my ordination,
I remembered
I had been born before.
The eye of heaven became clear.
The elements fo body and mind
I saw as other,
born from a cause,
subject to decay.
I have given up the obsessions
of the mind.
I am quenched and cool."
Sakula (6th-5th Centuries BCE?)
(translated by Susan Murcott)
Voices of Light
1999, edited by Aliki Barnstone
Shambhala Publications, Inc.
By Julie TaraWhen I lived in a house
"When I lived in a house
I heard a monk's words
and saw in those words
nirvana
the unchanging state.
I am the one
who left son and daughter,
money and grain,
cut off my hair
and set out into homelessness.
Under training
on the straight way,
desire and hatred fell away,
along with the obsessions
of the mind
that combine with them.
After my ordination,
I remembered
I had been born before.
The eye of heaven became clear.
The elements fo body and mind
I saw as other,
born from a cause,
subject to decay.
I have given up the obsessions
of the mind.
I am quenched and cool."
Sakula (6th-5th Centuries BCE?)
(translated by Susan Murcott)
Voices of Light
1999, edited by Aliki Barnstone
Shambhala Publications, Inc.