Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 2 | burning desires. The world is Vanity Fair,~full of changes and
2 1, 2 | ills of life. He saw the~vanity of worldly happiness and
3 1, 9 | interest in self,~and from our vanity when thinking 'I am so great,'
4 4, 12| pleasure and the lust after vanity. Truth~is the correct comprehension
5 4, 12| can dwell only where~all vanity has disappeared.~ Blessed
6 4, 12| conquered all selfishness and vanity. He has become the Buddha,
7 5, 18| morality. He~explained the vanity of the thought "I am"; the
8 6, 20| causes of the~misery and vanity in the world. Surrender
9 8, 25| meditate deeply on the vanity of earthly things, and~understand
10 13, 43| THE VANITY OF WORLDLINESS~ ~ THERE
11 13, 43| vanity-empty and desolate vanity.~ To see the world is idle,
12 13, 43| composed another poem on the vanity~of worldliness:~ ~ "It is
13 13, 47| He must not flatter his vanity by seeking the company~of
14 13, 48| but a pedestal of their vanity.~ Bad deeds, and deeds hurtful
15 13, 48| by passion, by hatred, by vanity, and by lust. Let no man~
16 13, 48| He who gives himself to vanity, and does not give himself
17 13, 57| offenses done only to gratify~vanity and self-seeking pride.
18 14, 60| from~covetousness or from vanity. The mendicant does right
19 16, 92| wisdom and deeply immersed in vanity; but she, although~living
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