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Sutta Nipata V.2

Tissa-metteyya-manava-puccha

Tissa-metteyya's Questions


Tissa-metteyya:
    Who
here in the world
is contented?
    Who
has no agitations?
    What thinker
knowing both sides,
doesn't adhere in between?
    Whom
do you call a great person?
    Who here
has gone past
the seamstress:
            craving.
The Buddha:
    He who
in the midst of sensualities,
follows the holy life,
always mindful, craving-free;
    the monk who is
-- through fathoming things --
        Unbound:
he has no agitations. He,
the thinker
knowing both sides,
doesn't adhere in between. He
I call a great person. He
here has gone past
the seamstress:
            craving.

Note

AN VI.61 reports a discussion among several elder monks as to what is meant in this poem by "both sides" and "in between." Six of the elders express the following separate opinions:

The issue is then taken to the Buddha, who states that all six interpretations are well-spoken, but the interpretation he had in mind when speaking the poem was the first.
Source: ATI - For Free Distribution Only, as a Gift of Dhamma.

Dhamma Essay:
For the Welfare of Many by Bhikkhu Bodhi


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