Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 6 | turned his horses and drove back to the city.~ When they
2 1, 8 | arrested their steps and looked back; and there~was no one who
3 1, 8 | from the serpent's mouth go back to be devoured? Would a
4 1, 8 | thou hast obtained it, come back, I pray thee, and receive
5 4, 16| man, can ever be turned back. The kingdom of~Truth will
6 4, 17| truth,~may be weak and slip back into his old ways. Therefore,
7 8, 27| attained~his purpose, is coming back."~ Suddhodana went out with
8 8, 27| heart,~"Siddhattha, come back to thine aged father and
9 12, 37| Thinking thus, he put his sword back into the~sheath.~ "The king
10 12, 37| And the king gave him back his father's~kingdom and
11 12, 40| which to go forward and back.' And the man~blind from
12 12, 40| and the~echo of it comes back. The teacher pronounces
13 13, 47| and~like an echo it came back from all the Bodhisattvas
14 13, 57| not the heaven, but comes back and defiles~his own person.
15 13, 57| other~would inflict comes back on himself." The abuser
16 14, 63| sinner.~ "He who brings back his wealth, like unto one
17 14, 65| who was caught~and brought back in spite of his cries and
18 14, 67| beautiful lake and brought him back in safety. Then all doubt~
19 14, 73| the~order, and has come back to us." Then the Teacher
20 15, 79| bloody~deed. The king fell back in a swoon, and when he
21 16, 83| while struggling to go back to his playmates,~upbraided
22 16, 84| ashes, and lo! they changed back into~gold. Considering that
23 16, 87| jumping on the elephant's back, insulted and~tormented
24 16, 87| old one, climbed upon his back and~did as before. The rogue
25 16, 93| teacher, who keeps some things~back.~ "Surely, Ananda, should
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