5: Praticing Meditation – 324
liberated from the dangers of birth, decay and death. It is, in fact, a region
already encircled by the snares of the king of death.”
A man, severely afflicted with hunger, at first eats with relish a big plateful of a
delicious meal, but later on, he becomes fed up and feels repugnant at it, on
account of the derangement of the bile or the phlegm or of the falling of a fly
onto the meal and he abandons it without the slightest thought of taking another
morsel. In the same way, the Bodhisatta, after putting efforts and gaining the
said eight mundane absorption attainments within two or three days without
difficulty, at first dwelt in and enjoyed the said attainments; but from the
moment he discerned the aforesaid defects, such as their being within the cycle
of suffering, etc., he had entirely lost interest in exercising the eight attainments,
even by means of one of the five kinds of mastery. He repeatedly abandoned the
attainments, saying: “These eight attainments are of no use whatever! These
eight attainments are of no use whatever!” And as he was wearied of them, he
departed from the sect-leader Udaka.
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