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Once when the Buddha is staying at Icchānangala, with
Nāgita as his attendant, the brahmins of Icchānangala come to pay him homage
with various kinds of offerings and make a great noise and uproar as they wait
outside the gate.
The Buddha is disturbed by their noise and expresses his
disapproval, whereupon, Nāgita begs of him to accept their homage and their
gifts, The Buddha answers that he has no need for them; he has attained the
happiness of renunciation, of insight, of awakening, of calm; happiness
proceeding from gains and flattery is dung like.
He knows of monks who joke and make merry, who eat their
bellies full and give themselves up to languor and torpor, or live on the
outskirts of some village. They do not please him, but a forest dwelling monk
pleases him because he knows that, some day, that monk will find emancipation.
A.iv.340ff.

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