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Dhamma Vagga. The ninth chapter of the
Duka Nipāta of the Anguttara Nikāya. A.i.83f.
1. Dhamma Sutta. On the four kinds of
preachers: those who speak little and cannot persuade the audience and those who
can; those who speak much and cannot persuade the audience and those who can.
A.ii.138.
2. Dhamma Sutta. On ten matters to be
continually considered by an ascetic. A.v.87f.
3. Dhamma Sutta. Devadatta brought
schism into the Order because, in him, the conditions of good karma came to be
extirpated. S. ii.240.
4. Dhamma Sutta (or Sajjhāya
Sutta). Once a certain monk retired to a forest track in Kosala. His life had
been one of great diligence, but later he lived at ease, resigned and given to
silence. A deva asked him the reason for this change, and he replied that he had
realised the Pure and the Holy (S.i.202).
5. Dhamma Sutta. See Nāvā Sutta.

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