Dhammapada Verses 155 and 156
Mahadhanasetthiputta Vatthu
Acaritva brahmacariyam
aladdha yobbane dhanam
jinnakoncava jhayanti
khinamaccheva pallale.
Acaritva brahmacariyam
aladdha yobbane dhanam
senti capatikhinava
puranani anutthunam.
Verse 155: They, who in youth have neither led the life of Purity nor have
acquired wealth, waste away in dejection like decrepit herons on a drying pond
deplete of fish.
Verse 156: They, who in youth have neither led the Life of Purity nor have
acquired wealth, lie helplessly like arrows that have lost momentum, moaning and
sighing after the past.
The Story of the Son of Mahadhana
While residing at the Migadaya wood, the Buddha uttered Verses (155) and
(156) of this book, with reference to the son of Mahadhana, a rich man from
Baranasi.
The son of Mahadhana did not study while he was young; when he came of age he
married the daughter of a rich man, who, like him, also had no education. When
the parents on both sides died, they inherited eighty crores from each side and
so were very rich. But both of them were ignorant and knew only how to spend
money and not how to keep it or to make it grow. They just ate and drank and had
a good time, squandering their money. When they had spent all, they sold their
fields and gardens and finally their house. Thus, they became very poor and
helpless; and because they did not know how to earn a living they had to go
begging. One day, the Buddha saw the rich man's son leaning against a wall of
the monastery, taking the leftovers given him by the samaneras; seeing him, the
Buddha smiled.
The Venerable Ananda asked the Buddha why he smiled, and the Buddha replied, "Ananda,
look at this son of a very rich man; he had lived a useless life, an aimless
life of pleasure. If he had learnt to look after his riches in the first stage
of his life he would have been a top-ranking rich man; or if he had become a
bhikkhu, he could have been an arahat, and his wife could have been an anagami.
If he had learnt to look after his riches in the second stage of his life he
would have been a second rank rich man, or if he had become a bhikkhu he could
have been an anagami, and his wife could have been a sakadagami. If he had
learnt to look after his riches in the third stage of his life he would have
been a third rank rich man, or if he had become a bhikkhu he could have been a
sakadagami, and his wife could have been a sotapanna. However, because he had
done nothing in all the three stages of his life he had lost all his worldly
riches, he had also lost all opportunities of attaining any of the Maggas and
Phalas."
Then the Buddha spoke in verse as follows:
Verse 155: They, who in youth have neither led the
life of Purity nor have acquired wealth, waste away in dejection like
decrepit herons on a drying pond deplete of fish. |
|
Verse 156: They, who in youth have neither led the
Life of Purity nor have acquired wealth, lie helplessly like arrows
that have lost momentum, moaning and sighing after the past. |
End of Chapter Eleven: Aging (Jaravagga)