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The Āsavas are destroyed only by self training, not by
merely wishing for their destruction. A hen may wish for her chicks to break
through their eggs with foot, or claw, or mouth, or beak, but they will not do
so till they are fully warmed, fully brooded over by the hen. When they are
ready to break through, they will do so, irrespective of the hen's wish. A
carpenter knows that his adze handle has worn away, not by looking at the finger
marks on the handle, but just by its wearing away.
A seagoing vessel, stranded without water and beaten on by
wind and sun, will fall to pieces easily and without effort. So will the Āsavas
in a monk who dwells attentive to self training. S. iii.152f.; cp. A.iv.126f.

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