Friday, June 22, 2012

Niti Shastra : Chapter Fourteen


1. Poverty, disease, sorrow, imprisonment and other evils are the fruits borne
by the tree of one's own sins.
2. Wealth, a friend, a wife, and a kingdom may be regained; but this body
when lost may never be acquired again.

 
3. The enemy can be overcome by the union of large numbers, just as grass
through its collectiveness wards off erosion caused by heavy rainfall.
4. Oil on water, a secret communicated to a base man, a gift given to a worthy
receiver, and scriptural instruction given to an intelligent man spread out by
virtue of their nature.
5. If men should always retain the state of mind they experience when hearing
religious instruction, when present at a crematorium ground, and when in
sickness -- then who could not attain liberation.
6. If a man should feel before, as he feels after, repentance -- then who would
not attain perfection?
7. We should not feel pride in our charity, austerity, valour, scriptural
knowledge, modesty and morality for the world is full of the rarest gems.
8. He who lives in our mind is near though he may actually be far away; but
he who is not in our heart is far though he may really be nearby.
9. We should always speak what would please the man of whom we expect a
favour, like the hunter who sings sweetly when he desires to shoot a deer.
10. It is ruinous to be familiar with the king, fire, the religious preceptor, and a
woman. To be altogether indifferent to them is to be deprived of the
opportunity to benefit ourselves, hence our association with them must be
from a safe distance.
11. We should always deal cautiously with fire, water, women, foolish people,
serpents, and members of a royal family; for they may, when the occasion
presents itself, at once bring about our death.
12. He should be considered to be living who is virtuous and pious, but the life
of a man who is destitute of religion and virtues is void of any blessing.
13. If you wish to gain control of the world by the performance of a single
deed, then keep the following fifteen, which are prone to wander here and
there, from getting the upper hand of you: the five sense objects (objects of
sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch); the five sense organs (ears, eyes, nose,
tongue and skin) and organs of activity (hands, legs, mouth, genitals and
anus).
14. He is a pandit (man of knowledge) who speaks what is suitable to the
occasion, who renders loving service according to his ability, and who knows
the limits of his anger.
15 One single object (a woman) appears in three different ways: to the man
who practices austerity it appears as a corpse, to the sensual it appears as a
woman, and to the dogs as a lump of flesh.
16. A wise man should not divulge the formula of a medicine which he has
well prepared; an act of charity which he has performed; domestic conflicts;
private affairs with his wife; poorly prepared food he may have been offered;
or slang he may have heard.
17. The cuckoos remain silent for a long time (for several seasons) until they
are able to sing sweetly (in the Spring) so as to give joy to all.
18. We should secure and keep the following: the blessings of meritorious
deeds, wealth, grain, the words of the spiritual master, and rare medicines.
Otherwise life becomes impossible.
19. Eschew wicked company and associate with saintly persons. Acquire
virtue day and night, and always meditate on that which is eternal forgetting
that which is temporary.

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