Chapter
1 I | Shintô shrine, I have the sensation of being haunted; and I
2 III| the nameless delicious sensation, the great vague wave of
3 IV | everything. I have the double sensation of being myself a ghost
4 V | detail to the expression of a sensation or idea, the subordination
5 VII| character, - that gives the sensation of the very-far-away in
6 VII| giver of victory.~ The sensation received on passing out
7 VII| imagine it must be like a sensation of the supernatural, - a
8 IX | extinction of individual sensation, emotion, thought, - the
9 IX | imperfect man, - beyond sensation, perception, thought, -
10 IX | composed of units of simple sensation which are physiologically
11 IX | mechanism, give rise to the sensation of sound; - other vibrations,
12 IX | indirectly, from physical sensation, - from touch. Of course
13 IX | films spun out of perishable sensation, - that even Time and Place
14 IX | physiologist might say that sensation is a product of the sensiferous
15 IX | which would not explain sensation. No more in Buddhism than
16 IX | be evolutions, - forms of sensation developed, through billions
17 IX | the volume~p. 235}~of all sensation. After the state of equilibration
18 IX | survive not even the simplest sensation possible to the lowest form
19 IX | interwoven with it, - the sensation of beauty, for example,
20 IX | power, a heightening of sensation. Immense the reward of self-conquest;
21 X | the mere woof and warp of sensation and desire, then I can best
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