(P31)
|
(Q209680)
|
(P180)
|
(Q1411242)
(P527)
|
|
(P1705)
|
"poisonous serpent (Three Poisons)" (language: en)
|
(P854)
|
https://www.buddhamountain.ca./SUTRA_EN.php
|
(P1683)
|
"And below there was a poisonous serpent." (language: en)
|
(Q125523346)
(P1705)
|
"five drops of honey (five strands of desire)" (language: en)
|
(P854)
|
https://www.buddhamountain.ca./SUTRA_EN.php
|
(P1683)
|
"The tree roots had in them the honey of bees, five drops of which fell into his mouth. / The dripping honey is a metaphor for the five desires (taste, touch, smell etc)" (language: en)
|
|
(P361)
|
(Q18458458)
|
(P407)
|
(Q7850)
|
(P655)
|
(Q457629)
(P854)
|
http://www.acmuller.net./descriptive_catalogue/files/k0868.html
|
(P1683)
|
"Translation by I-ching: 4th year of Ching Lung (景龍), T'ang dynasty (唐) (A.D. 710) in Ta-chien-fu Monastery (大薦福寺).1" (language: en)
|
|
(P710)
|
(Q3055324)
(P854)
|
https://tripitaka.cbeta.org./T04n0217_001
|
(P1683)
|
"勝光王" (language: zh)
|
|
(P953)
|
https://www.buddhamountain.ca./SUTRA_EN.php
(P1476)
|
"The Parable Sutra" (language: en)
|
(P1932)
|
T0217
|
(P4945)
|
https://www.buddhamountain.ca./ENT0217_by_Charles_Patton.php
https://www.buddhamountain.ca./pgm-download_media.php?name=ENT0217_The_Parable_Sutra.pdf
|
(P1683)
|
"TAISHO TRIPITAKA / T0217, The Parable Sutra, Charles Patton, pdf" (language: en)
|
https://tripitaka.cbeta.org./T04n0217_001
|
(P1299)
|
(Q13223470)
(P854)
|
https://en.wikisource.org./wiki/A_Confession_%28Maude%27s_translation%29/IV
|
(P1683)
|
"There is an Eastern fable, told long ago, of a traveller overtaken on a plain by an enraged beast. [...] The traveller sees this and knows that he will inevitably perish; but while still hanging he looks around, sees some drops of honey on the leaves of the twig, reaches them with his tongue and licks them. [...]" (language: en)
|
|
(P1343)
|
(Q10886720)
|
(P1382)
|
(Q1381826)
(P356)
|
10.1093/oso/9780197661741.003.0008
|
(P1683)
|
"8 / Secularism and the Ethic of Appreciation / “Appreciate Your Life”: Strawberries and the Ethic of Appreciation / There exist, [...] The Buddhist one is in the Lalitavistara, a fourth-century Sanskrit account of the life of the Buddha, from which it was incorporated into a Chinese sūtra (Taisho 217). In this text, the man is chased by an elephant instead of a tiger, he falls into a well instead of off a cliff, and two rats, rather than mice, nibble the vine." (language: en)
|
|
(P1889)
|
(Q4778977)
|