Works by Candragomin preserved in Tibetan, including letters, drama, reasoning, and bodhisattva discipline.
Pages
Letter to a Student — Candragomin — Candragomin's letter to a student who broke his monastic vows — a fifth-century masterwork on impermanence, the hells, the rarity of human birth, and the bodhisattva's compassion. Good Works Translation from the Dege Tengyur (D4183). Liberation of Hahn 1999.
Praise of Confession — Candragomin — Candragomin's confession that every spiritual remedy produces a new disease — a masterpiece of Buddhist psychological honesty from 5th-century India, translated from Tibetan for the first time.
The Lamp of Established Reasoning — Candragomin — A Buddhist layman's treatise on the foundations of valid reasoning — the four types of reasoning, how each corrupts when misused, and how all logic dissolves into a single principle. First English translation from the Tibetan.
The Play of Universal Joy — Candragomin — A five-act Buddhist drama by Candragomin (5th century) about the Bodhisattva Prince Crest-Jewel and his supreme generosity. First English translation from Tibetan.
The Utterance Discourse — Candragomin — A Buddhist verse epistle on death, karma, and refuge by the Indian poet-grammarian Candragomin, in which the poet addresses his own mind with unflinching directness — from the jaws of the sea-monster to the marketplace of the living to the compassionate Buddha who never forgets. First English translation from the Tibetan (Tengyur D4173).
Twenty Verses on the Bodhisattva’s Discipline — Candragomin — A twenty-verse guide to the bodhisattva vow by Candragomin (c. 5th century CE), enumerating the four root downfalls, the confession protocol, and the secondary infractions — closing with the principle that where there is compassion, there is no fault. First English translation from the Tibetan Buddhist Tengyur (D4081).