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Dhammapada

Chapter XI: Old Age
Buddhist trans. Max Müller (SBE vol. 10) • c. 3rd century BCE
146
How is there laughter, how is there joy, as this world is always burning? Why do you not seek a light, ye who are surrounded by darkness?
147
Look at this dressed-up lump, covered with wounds, joined together, sickly, full of many thoughts, which has no strength, no hold!
148
This body is wasted, full of sickness, and frail; this heap of corruption breaks to pieces, life indeed ends in death.
149
Those white bones, like gourds thrown away in the autumn, what pleasure is there in looking at them?
150
After a stronghold has been made of the bones, it is covered with flesh and blood, and there dwell in it old age and death, pride and deceit.
151
The brilliant chariots of kings are destroyed, the body also approaches destruction, but the virtue of good people never approaches destruction,--thus do the good say to the good.
152
A man who has learnt little, grows old like an ox; his flesh grows, but his knowledge does not grow.
153-154
Looking for the maker of this tabernacle, I shall have to run through a course of many births, so long as I do not find (him); and painful is birth again and again. But now, maker of the tabernacle, thou hast been seen; thou shalt not make up this tabernacle again. All thy rafters are broken, thy ridge-pole is sundered; the mind, approaching the Eternal (visankhâra, nirvâna), has attained to the extinction of all desires.
155
Men who have not observed proper discipline, and have not gained treasure in their youth, perish like old herons in a lake without fish.
156
Men who have not observed proper discipline, and have not gained treasure in their youth, lie, like broken bows, sighing after the past.