Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 7 | BODHISATTVAS RENUNCIATION~ ~ IT was night. The prince found no rest
2 1, 7 | rode out into the silent night, accompanied only by~his
3 5, 18| secretly rose up in the night and stole away to the~Blessed
4 6, 19| and said: "Let me stay a night in the room where~you keep
5 6, 19| with watchfulness. In the night the~dragon came, belching
6 6, 20| service from morn~until night, ye that live in constant
7 6, 21| day not too crowded and by night not exposed to noise, wholesome~
8 7, 23| he set out on that very night to meet the Blessed~One.~
9 11, 34| heavy rain fell during the night and the next morning; and
10 12, 37| the guards drunk. When the night arrived~he laid the bodies
11 12, 37| voice ringing through the night~and singing to the lute
12 13, 48| concealed, like arrows shot by night.~ If a man by causing pain
13 13, 48| with fools. Long is the night to him who is awake;~long
14 13, 48| day, the moon shines by night, the warrior is~bright in
15 13, 48| brightest, with splendor day and night, is the Buddha, the~Awakened,
16 13, 53| a man wants, during the night, to send a letter, and,
17 13, 53| lamp; would~it burn the night through?" "Yes, it might
18 13, 53| in the first watch of the~night as in the second?" Kutadanta
19 13, 58| fire? What is the darkest night?" The~Blessed One replied: "
20 13, 58| ignorance is the darkest night."~ The deva said: "Who gains
21 14, 60| darkness, the shades of night steal over us, and~Mara,
22 14, 69| radiancy is~glorious by day and night, and he whose faith is strong
23 14, 73| and traveled during the night. And at daybreak they formed
24 14, 73| thought, "Now, in one more night~we shall get out of the
25 14, 73| The oxen went on~the whole night through. Towards dawn the
26 16, 84| last the darkness of the night reigned~everywhere. And
27 16, 90| gladdened them far into the night with religious edification,
28 16, 90| dismissed them, saying, "The night is far spent, O householders.
29 16, 92| girl!"~ At the end of the night Ambapali, the courtesan,
30 17, 95| exceeding bright. In the~night, Ananda, in which a Tathagata
31 17, 95| perfect~insight, and in the night in which he passes finally
32 18, 97| in the last~watch of the night, the final passing away
33 18, 97| Ananda spent the rest of~the night in religious discourse.
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