Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 3, 8 | consciousness. "The falling leaves as well as the blooming
2 1, 4, 11 | trees and grass turn their leaves towards the sun of their
3 1, 4, 14 | typical of that Spirit. "The leaves of the plantain," says a
4 1, 4, 16 | I am out or in, He never leaves me, even as a shadow accompanies
5 1, 5, 16 | of his rich inheritance, leaves his home and leads a life
6 1, 6, 8 | immutable and constant. It often leaves changing and concrete individual
7 1, 6, 11 | branches large or small, leaves green or yellow, flowers
8 1, 7, 3 | things ever in pairs,' and leaves nothing in isolation. Positives
9 1, 7, 6 | Silkworms feed on mulberry leaves and make silk from it, but
10 1, 7, 6 | can do nothing with other leaves. Thus everything has its
11 1, 7, 8 | forth again,~Bearing bright leaves, or dark, sweet fruit or
12 1, 7, 8 | fair,~Is ever done, but it leaves somewhere~A record-as a
13 1, 7, 11 | in which we have green leaves and flowers wherever we
14 1, 8, 6 | upward slowly as the air leaves the lungs. When the air
15 1, 8, 9 | giving the master some palm leaves he brought from India, went
16 Appen, 2, 3 | and it acts upon Alaya and leaves its impressions3 there.
17 Appen, 2 (3)| external objects exist, leaves the impression of the seed-ideas
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