Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 1 | one desires?" To~beings subject to birth there comes the
2 1, 1 | desire: "O that we were not~subject to birth! O that no new
3 1, 1 | new birth was before us!" Subject to~decay, disease, death,
4 1, 1 | them: "O that we were not subject to~these things! O that
5 1, 5 | transient"; all formations are "subject to~suffering"; all things
6 1, 5 | that which is transient, is subject to suffering; and of that~
7 1, 5 | which is transient, and subject to suffering and change,
8 1, 6 | to you~that also you are subject to decay, that also you
9 1, 6 | to you that also you are subject to disease, that~also you
10 1, 6 | to you that~also you are subject to death, that also you
11 3, 20| consciousness, are transient [subject to~suffering, and without
12 3, 20| permanent, stable, eternal, not subject to change, and will~thus
13 3, 20| that all formations are "subject to suffering"; that~everything
14 3, 20| persistent, eternal and not~subject to change: such a thing
15 3, 20| of dependent origin, are~subject to decay and dissolution,
16 3, 20| with pleasure and pain,~subject to rising and passing away.~
17 3, 28| regards as "impermanent,"~"subject to pain," as infirm, as
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