Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 9 | no efficacy; prayers are vain~repetitions; and incantations
2 4, 12| are their pleasures, how vain are their~endeavors! Hollow
3 4, 12| many births I sought in vain~ The Builder of this House
4 4, 14| they, when others start vain doctrines, shall be able
5 4, 15| which they practiced in vain.~ Upaka, a young Brahman
6 4, 16| self-indulgence which is unworthy, vain and fit only for~the worldly-minded
7 7, 23| longer lose ourselves in vain speculations~or profitless
8 12, 36| with men who are~selfish, vain, quarrelsome, and obstinate
9 13, 43| untold -~ But all is in vain unless you attain the peace
10 13, 45| wrath, annihilating~the vain conceit of the "I-am, leaving
11 13, 48| arrive at~truth, but follow vain desires. They who know truth
12 13, 49| follow that~their task is vain?"~ "It does follow, replied
13 13, 49| of mere words, and is a vain~and empty thing. Now suppose,"
14 13, 53| soul. Yet is thy work in vain~because thou art lacking
15 13, 53| replied: "Is all teaching~in vain? Dost thou not understand
16 14, 60| promise of the happy~region vain talk and a myth?"~ "What
17 14, 63| having searched herself in vain for something~to give, she
18 15, 78| store-houses were emptied, but in vain. Then~the tyrant grew desperate
19 18, 97| what I~command sees me in vain. This brings no profit;
|