Chapter
1 1 | emitting sweet-sounding voices.~8. They let go forth, each
2 2 | who are firm in resolve.~8. As to the disciples of
3 3 | inconceivable, unbounded knowledge!'~8. Days and nights, O Lord,
4 4 | favourite of the king's.~8. The citizens bow to him
5 5 | down its water all around.~8. And so, flashing on every
6 6 | Sûtrântas of great extension.~8. As to disciples, faultless,
7 7 | with the following stanzas:~8. Thou art the great physician,
8 8 | course of life (or story).~8. Pûrna here, monks, my disciple,
9 9 | and perfect enlightenment.~8. Râhula here, my own eldest
10 10| of the Extinct (Buddha).~8. One should give food, hard
11 11| great multitude of lotuses.~8. Many kotis of bases of
12 12| become our calumniators.~8. The Tîrthikas, themselves
13 13| always firm and undaunted.~8. He should have no intercourse
14 14| whence have they come?~8. And each of those Bodhisattvas,
15 15| the world of the living.~8. Honoured by other beings,
16 16| superior enlightenment.~8. Such is the effect produced
17 17| particle of the latter's.~8. So great will be one's
18 18| exception, in this world.~8. He perceives the sounds
19 19| then is myself, Sâkyamuni.~8. And those persons who only
20 20| Bodhisattvas and the four classes.~8. Such a one now here propitiates
21 24| stand firm in the sky.~8. If rocks of thunderstone
|