Danger is born from intimacy, [1]
society gives birth to dust. [2]
Free from intimacy,
free from society:
such is the vision of the sage.Who, destroying what's born, would not plant again
or nourish what will arise:
They call him the wandering, singular sage.
He has seen the state of peace.Considering the ground,
crushing the seed,
he would not nourish the sap [3]
-- truly a sage --
seer of the ending of birth,
abandoning conjecture, he cannot be classified.Knowing all dwellings, [4]
not longing for any one anywhere
-- truly a sage --
with no coveting, no greed,
he does not build, [5] for he has gone beyond.* * *
Overcoming all
knowing all,
wise.
With regard to all things: unsmeared.Abandoning all,
in the ending of craving,
released:
The wise call him a sage.Strong in discernment,
virtuous in his practices,
composed,
delighting in meditation,
mindful,
freed from attachments,
no barrenness :: no effluents: [6]
The wise call him a sage.The wandering solitary sage,
uncomplacent, unshaken by praise or blame.
Unstartled, like a lion at sounds.
Unsnared, like the wind in a net.
Unsmeared, like a lotus in water.
Leader of others, by others unled:
The wise call him a sage.Like the pillar at a bathing ford, [7]
when others speak in extremes.
He, without passion, his senses well-composed:
The wise call him a sage.Truly poised, straight as a shuttle, [8]
he loathes evil actions.
Pondering what is on-pitch and off: [9]
The wise call him a sage.Self-restrained, he does no evil.
Young and middle-aged, the sage self-controlled,
never angered, he angers none:
The wise call him a sage.From the best
the middling
the leftovers
he receives alms.
Sustaining himself on what others give,
neither flattering
nor speaking disparagement:
The wise call him a sage.The wandering sage
not delighting in sex,
in youth bound by no one,
not delighting in heedlessness
intoxication [10]
totally freed:
The wise call him a sage.Knowing the world,
seeing the highest goal,
crossing the ocean, [11] the flood [12]
-- Such -- [13]
his chains broken,
unbound
without effluent:
The wise call him a sage.* * *
These two are different,
they dwell far apart:
the householder supporting a wife
and the unselfish one, of good practices.
Slaying other beings, the householder
is unrestrained.
Constantly the sage protects other beings,
is controlled.As the crested, blue-necked peacock, when flying,
never matches the wild goose in speed:
Even so the householder never keeps up with the monk,
the sage secluded,
meditating
in the forest.