Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Intro | cold morning by making a fire of wooden statues. Therefore
2 1, 1 (1)| pure, free from pebbles, fire, and dust, delightful by
3 1, 1 (1)| those of misty smoke, sun, fire, wind, fire-flies, lightnings,
4 1, 1 (1)| obtained a body produced by the fire of Yoga.~The first results
5 1, 1 (4)| Earth, water, fire, and air.~
6 1, 4, 2 | on a cold morning by the fire made of a wooden statue
7 1, 4, 17 | the past existences; all fire and air our essence."~Thus
8 1, 5, 19 | science provides fuel for the fire of strife.~Was the golden
9 1, 5, 20 | Still we believe that, as fire drives out fire, to borrow
10 1, 5, 20 | that, as fire drives out fire, to borrow Shakespeare's
11 1, 6, 2 | identified. In like manner fire~and heat, air and wind,
12 1, 6, 18 | little spark of celestial fire called conscience."~We are
13 1, 6, 18 | jealousy, and hatred feed the fire of anger? Let us pray to
14 1, 7, 9 | himself who kindles our inward fire to save ourselves from sin
15 1, 8, 2 | for our noble ends; that fire, water, air, grass, trees,
16 1, 8, 3 | drowned in water or burned by fire.~E-Shun, a pupil and sister
17 1, 8, 16 | person)~might get into the fire, and it would not burn him.
18 Appen, 2, 2 | and knew not the use of fire. As it belongs to the remote
19 Appen, 2, 2 | water, (2) the period of fire, (3) the period of wind. '
20 Appen, 2, 2 | elements of earth, water, fire, and wind, while mind consists
21 Appen, 4 (4)| 1) Earth, (2) water, (3) fire, (4) air,~
|