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<h2> Chapter X. Punishment </h2>
<p>129. All men tremble at punishment, all men fear death; remember that you
are like unto them, and do not kill, nor cause slaughter.</p>
<p>130. All men tremble at punishment, all men love life; remember that thou
art like unto them, and do not kill, nor cause slaughter.</p>
<p>131. He who seeking his own happiness punishes or kills beings who also
long for happiness, will not find happiness after death.</p>
<p>132. He who seeking his own happiness does not punish or kill beings who
also long for happiness, will find happiness after death.</p>
<p>133. Do not speak harshly to anybody; those who are spoken to will answer
thee in the same way. Angry speech is painful, blows for blows will touch
thee.</p>
<p>134. If, like a shattered metal plate (gong), thou utter not, then thou
hast reached Nirvana; contention is not known to thee.</p>
<p>135. As a cowherd with his staff drives his cows into the stable, so do
Age and Death drive the life of men.</p>
<p>136. A fool does not know when he commits his evil deeds: but the wicked
man burns by his own deeds, as if burnt by fire.</p>
<p>137. He who inflicts pain on innocent and harmless persons, will soon come
to one of these ten states:</p>
<p>138. He will have cruel suffering, loss, injury of the body, heavy
affliction, or loss of mind,</p>
<p>139. Or a misfortune coming from the king, or a fearful accusation, or
loss of relations, or destruction of treasures,</p>
<p>140. Or lightning-fire will burn his houses; and when his body is
destroyed, the fool will go to hell.</p>
<p>141. Not nakedness, not platted hair, not dirt, not fasting, or lying on
the earth, not rubbing with dust, not sitting motionless, can purify a
mortal who has not overcome desires.</p>
<p>142. He who, though dressed in fine apparel, exercises tranquillity, is
quiet, subdued, restrained, chaste, and has ceased to find fault with all
other beings, he indeed is a Brahmana, an ascetic (sramana), a friar
(bhikshu).</p>
<p>143. Is there in this world any man so restrained by humility that he does
not mind reproof, as a well-trained horse the whip?</p>
<p>144. Like a well-trained horse when touched by the whip, be ye active and
lively, and by faith, by virtue, by energy, by meditation, by discernment
of the law you will overcome this great pain (of reproof), perfect in
knowledge and in behaviour, and never forgetful.</p>
<p>145. Well-makers lead the water (wherever they like); fletchers bend the
arrow; carpenters bend a log of wood; good people fashion themselves.</p>
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