Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Intro | the destroying of mean desires, the uplifting of the moral
2 1, 1 (1)| dust of passions and of low desires often pollute and dim it.
3 1, 1 (1)| free from passions and mean desires, just as the sun is always
4 1, 1 (1)| realize that one has no mean desires and passions from the first,
5 1, 4, 18 | New ideals realized or new desires satisfied are sure to awaken
6 1, 4, 18 | awaken newer and stronger desires. Not an instant life remains
7 1, 5, 20 | quite another race. Our desires and hopes are entirely different
8 1, 5, 20 | and warships, and heartily desires peace. No nation can willingly
9 1, 6, 10 | polluted with materialistic desires, and uplifts us above the
10 1, 7, 1 | there arise mean desires-the desires to please sight, hearing,
11 1, 7, 1 | taste, and touch. These five desires are ever pursuing or,~~rather,
12 1, 7, 1 | which gratify our sensual desires. When we gratify one desire,
13 1, 7, 1 | sticky), sticks to the five desires (the snout and the four
14 1, 7, 4 | ideal; still his material desires drag him down to the earth.
15 1, 8, 4 | the putting out of mean desires and passions, and the awakening
16 1, 8, 7 | let go of passions and desires, give up ideas and thoughts,
17 1, 8, 12 | Consciousness. He gives up all mean desires and aspires to spiritual
18 1, 8, 12 | naturally pure from material desires. No more he makes an effort
19 Appen, 2, 2 | purpose of denouncing worldly desires. The wind in the empty space
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