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Preached at Jetavana to Arittha
concerning his heresy. Arittha held that according to the Doctrine, as he
understood it, the states of mind, e.g. pleasures of sense, declared by the
Buddha to be stumbling-blocks, are not such at all to the man who indulges in
them. The Buddha questioned Arittha regarding this, and when Arittha
acknowledged that such was his view, the Buddha rebuked him as having not even a
spark of illumination regarding the Dhamma and the Vinaya.
Foolish persons, who have learned the
Doctrine by heart but fail to study its import, quite miss the real meaning of
their memorising and find no joy in it, using it solely as a means of stricture
on others or of bandying verbal quotations; they are like a man who, finding a
serpent, seizes it by its tail or coils and gets bitten, meeting thereby death
or deadly hurt. But those, who comprehend all that the Doctrine embodies,
resemble a man who pins a serpent securely down with a forked stick and grasps
it firmly by its neck.
This sutta also contains the parable of
the raft. The Doctrine is like a raft to be used in crossing the flood and then
to be abandoned. Even good things must eventually be discarded, therefore, how
much more bad things?
The last part of the sutta contains
questions, chiefly on the mastery of self, asked by various monks, which the
Buddha proceeds to explain (M.i.130ff.; MA.i.321ff). The sutta is quoted by
Buddhaghosa (MA.i.136) as an example of a discourse of which the meaning is
illustrated by a variety of similes (atthena upamam parivāretvā). (v.l. Alagadda
Sutta.)

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