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Once, while the Buddha was at Campā on the
banks of the Gaggarā Lake, a monk, charged by
his colleagues with an offence, reviled them; the Buddha, hearing of it,
insisted that the man should be expelled, lest the rest of the community should
suffer by his presence. He illustrated his argument with various similes, among
them that of the owner of a barley-field who, seeing among his corn a diseased
plant (yava-kārandava) which failed to ripen, would uproot it and throw it away
lest the other plants should be affected. A.iv.168-72.

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