Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 6 | charioteer replied: "This is a dead man: his body is stark;~
2 1, 6 | terror: "Is this the only dead man, he asked, or~does the
3 2, 10| staggered and lay~as though dead.~ There was a chief herdsman
4 4, 15| first? My old teachers are dead. They would have received
5 6, 19| the Blessed One showed the dead body of the fiend~to Kassapa,
6 13, 43| the low.~ And daily the dead are buried beneath the fragrant
7 13, 48| are~thoughtless are as if dead already. Those who imagine
8 14, 61| all changes. Both cast out dead~bodies upon the dry land.
9 14, 72| stricken with~apoplexy and fell dead. The Buddha said, for the
10 16, 83| corpse and lay there as one dead. The relatives came and~
11 16, 83| relatives came and~buried the dead child and when the father
12 16, 84| her grief she~carried the dead child to all her neighbors,
13 16, 84| lost her senses. The boy is dead. At~length Kisa Gotami met
14 16, 84| living are few, but the dead are many. Do~not remind
15 16, 84| child, Kisa~Gotami had the dead body buried in the forest.
16 16, 84| himself sick and pale, yet the dead are~not saved by his lamentation.
17 16, 91| still be anxious about the dead, this~is wearisome to the
18 16, 93| either now or after I am dead, shall be lamps unto~themselves,
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