The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha

· Sold by Vintage
4.5
17 reviews
Ebook
128
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Trembling and quivering is the mind,
Difficult to guard and hard to restrain.
The person of wisdom sets it straight,
As a fletcher does an arrow.

The Dhammapada introduced the actual utterances of the Buddha nearly twenty-five hundred years ago, when the master teacher emerged from his long silence to illuminate for his followers the substance of humankind’s deepest and most abiding concerns. The nature of the self, the value of relationships, the importance of moment-to-moment awareness, the destructiveness of anger, the suffering that attends attachment, the ambiguity of the earth’s beauty, the inevitability of aging, the certainty of death–these dilemmas preoccupy us today as they did centuries ago. No other spiritual texts speak about them more clearly and profoundly than does the Dhammapada.

In this elegant new translation, Sanskrit scholar Glenn Wallis has exclusively referred to and quoted from the canonical suttas–the presumed earliest discourses of the Buddha–to bring us the heartwood of Buddhism, words as compelling today as when the Buddha first spoke them. On violence: All tremble before violence./ All fear death./ Having done the same yourself,/ you should neither harm nor kill. On ignorance: An uninstructed person/ ages like an ox,/ his bulk increases,/ his insight does not. On skillfulness: A person is not skilled/ just because he talks a lot./ Peaceful, friendly, secure–/ that one is called “skilled.”

In 423 verses gathered by subject into chapters, the editor offers us a distillation of core Buddhist teachings that constitutes a prescription for enlightened living, even in the twenty-first century. He also includes a brilliantly informative guide to the verses–a chapter-by-chapter explication that greatly enhances our understanding of them. The text, at every turn, points to practical applications that lead to freedom from fear and suffering, toward the human state of spiritual virtuosity known as awakening.

Glenn Wallis’s translation is an inspired successor to earlier versions of the suttas. Even those readers who are well acquainted with the Dhammapada will be enriched by this fresh encounter with a classic text.

Ratings and reviews

4.5
17 reviews
Mac
June 6, 2018
This includes infamous Thomas Byrom translation of Dhammapada which is highly inaccurate. Since Thomas Byrom was in fact a Christian, he has interpreted a lot of the original quotes to be in favour of Christian methodology. For example, it translates: "We are what we think. All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our thoughts we make the world." Which stands agains everything Buddhism wants to accomplish. The right translation is along the lines of: "All experiences are preceded by mind, having mind as their master created by mind." But that does NOT mean that we are what we think, quite the opposite actually. We aren't anything at all, we are just BEING this and that involuntarily with little control of thinking process. Coming from one impermanent, transforming formation, and giving birth to another. That does not imply concrete, unchanging essence of us, like soul etc. Author indeed concludes that this "beautiful passage burns your soul when you hear this", which (having soul) is again, against Buddhism concept of impermanence and no Self/base essence.
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Jonathan
February 17, 2019
Can get the Dhammapada for free elsewhere on Google Books.
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sharda baste
February 8, 2018
I believe in lord Buddha.. a great majestic person .
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About the author

GLENN WALLIS has a Ph.D. in Sanskrit and Indian Studies from Harvard. He is assistant professor of religion at the University of Georgia and the author of Mediating the Power of Buddhas and numerous articles.

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