Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 1 (2)| are well known. In these days Zen should have been in
2 1, 1, 4 | continually on one spot for seven days and nights with beads of
3 1, 2, 5 | nothing to eat for several days. Fortunately, they were
4 1, 2, 10 | was prosperous in these days from the splendid monasteries2
5 1, 2, 12 | forming a class in these days practised Zen. Mune-nori2 (
6 1, 3, 3 | sat motionless for seven days under the Bodhi tree, absorbed
7 1, 3 (1)| no word for fifty-seven days after his Enlightenment.
8 1, 3 (1)| written at once in these days, but that they were copied
9 1, 4, 5 | you how she saw her better days, and is now in her wrinkles
10 1, 4 (1)| dead for one, two, or three days, swollen, turning black
11 1, 5, 20 | forefathers of good old days.~In addition to this we
12 1, 6, 10 | as Jesus did in the old days. Zen makes use of moral
13 1, 7, 6 | men can finish in three days the same amount of work
14 1, 7, 6 | done by three men in four days. The increase in the number
15 1, 7, 6 | the decrease in that of days, the decrease in the number
16 1, 7, 6 | the increase in that of days, the result being always
17 1, 7, 7 | must not, then, despair in days of frost and snow, reminding
18 1, 7, 7 | must we be thoughtless in days of youth and health, keeping
19 1, 7, 8 | his state of mind in the days of misfortune:~"When Confucius
20 1, 7, 8 | Khan and Zhai, for seven days he had no cooked meat to
21 1, 7, 13 | because, if they last for days together, the morning glory
22 1, 8, 3 | might during my remaining days, for if your diagnosis be
23 1, 8, 11 | keep yourself pure three days more in order to qualify
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