Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 6 | sportive life; but now, as~years have passed away, his beauty
2 2, 10| Bodhisattva continued for six years patiently torturing~himself
3 2, 10| withdrew, saying: "For seven years I have followed the~Blessed
4 7, 24| and the fruit in future years. Even so is the result of
5 8, 27| son said: "It is now seven years~since I have seen thee.
6 9, 28| emotion. During the~seven years that she has lost her husband,
7 10, 29| Anuruddha the philosopher. Some years later Ananda,~another cousin
8 10, 29| dressed Rahula, now seven years old, in all the splendor~
9 11, 32| surely to last a thousand years it would, when women joined
10 11, 32| decay after five hundred years; but observing the zeal
11 11, 35| Magadha, was advanced in years,~he retired from the world
12 13, 48| Better than living a hundred years not~seeing the highest truth,
13 13, 53| an identity, whether many years elapsed or only one~second,
14 13, 53| cleavest is a constant change. Years ago thou wast a~small babe;
15 14, 72| Brahman, well advanced in years, who, unmindful~of the impermanence
16 16, 83| promise, who, when~seven years old, was struck with a fatal
17 16, 84| If a man live a hundred years,~or even more, he will at
18 16, 92| calm and composed.~Young in years, rich, surrounded by pleasures,
19 16, 93| old, O Ananda, and full of years; my journey is~drawing to
20 16, 93| days, I am~turning eighty years of age. Just as a wornout
21 16, 94| Tathagata to Ananda: "In former years, Ananda, Mara, the~Evil
22 18, 97| who were deep stricken in years and teachers of great~experience: '
23 18, 97| fortune, that for so many~years thou hast been sprinkled
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