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1. Dārukkhandha Sutta. - Sāriputta, coming
down Gijjhakuta, sees a log of wood, and tells the monks that a wise person
could see all the elements in that log. A.iii.340.
2. Dārukkhandha Sutta. The Buddha, while
staying at Kosambī, sees a great log of wood floating down the river, and tells
the monks that just as the log, if it does not ground on a bank, or sink in
midstream, or stick on a shoal, or fall into human or non-human hands, or get
caught in a whirlpool, or rot inwardly, will, without doubt, float down to the
ocean; so will a monk, without doubt, float down to
Nibbāna if he escapes the
dangers on the way. The monks ask what the dangers are, and the Buddha explains
them, on the analogy of the dangers besetting the log. At the end of the
discourse, the cowherd Nanda, who had been listening, joined the Order.
S.iv.179f.
3. Dārukkhandha Sutta. The same as the
above, except that the place mentioned is Kimbilā, and the explanations are
given to Kimbila. S. iv.181.

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