Chapter
1 1 | decrepitude, sickness, death, sorrow, lamentation, woe,
2 3 | decrepitude, disease, and death is inseparably connected
3 3 | birth, old age, disease, death, grief, wailing, pain, melancholy,
4 3 | birth, old age, disease, death, grief, wailing, pain, melancholy,
5 3 | birth, old age, disease, death, grief, wailing, pain, melancholy,
6 4 | It is to be feared lest death shall overtake me and all
7 4 | feels that the time of his death is near at hand. He says
8 4 | poverty. The time of his death approaching, he sends for
9 4 | wealth and the hour of my death draws near.'~11. Meanwhile
10 5 | present life, but also after death will reach happy states,
11 7 | birth; from birth old age, death, mourning, lamentation,
12 7 | results that of old age, death, mourning, lamentation,
13 7 | Seer proceeded to speak of death, endless woe; all those
14 7 | birth. Know likewise that death is the lot of mankind.~75.
15 11| fatal term, the time (of death), is now at hand; the Tathâgata
16 19| decrepitude, sickness, death, sorrow, lamentation, woe,
17 19| sky, when the time of his death was near at hand. On hearing
18 19| part. At the time when his death was impending he heard this
19 22| arrived; the time of my death has arrived. Therefore,
20 22| decrepitude, no untimely death. Whenever a person striving
21 24| a refuge, a recourse in death, disaster, and calamity.~
22 26| and at the moment of his death he shall see another thousand
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