Chapter
1 18| By means of that organ he smells the different smells that
2 18| he smells the different smells that are found in the triple
3 18| and without, such as fetid smells, pleasant and unpleasant
4 18| pleasant and unpleasant smells, the fragrance of diverse
5 18| water-lily and white lotus. He smells the odour of fruits and
6 18| mixtures of perfumes he smells and discerns, without moving
7 18| from his standing-place. He smells the diverse smells of creatures,
8 18| standing-place. He smells the diverse smells of creatures, as elephants,
9 18| brutes. He perceives the smells exhaled by the body of women
10 18| men, of boys and girls. He smells, even from a distance, the
11 18| trees. He perceives those smells such as they really are,
12 18| Staying on this very earth he smells the odour of gods and the
13 18| Mañgûsha and great Mañgûsha. He smells the perfume of the divine
14 18| different divine flowers. He smells the odour exhaled by the
15 18| pleasure-park for sport. He smells the odour proceeding from
16 18| surprised or stunned by those smells. He likewise smells the
17 18| those smells. He likewise smells the odour exhaled by the
18 18| manner he perceives the smells coming from disciples, Pratyekabuddhas,
19 18| Bodhisattvas, and Tathâgatas. He smells the odour arising from the
20 18| none of all those different smells is his organ of smell hindered,
21 18| give an account of those smells to others without his memory
22 18| the manifold and various smells, good or bad, which exist
23 18| He likewise perceives the smells exhaled by men, women, boys,
24 18| various designs of men, he smells (so to say) an air of design;
25 18| Bodhisattva by the scent smells treasures hidden in the
26 18| his very place on earth smells the flowers here above (
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