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The second book of the Khuddaka Nikāya
of the Sutta Pitaka.
It is probably a later anthology than
the Thera-Therī-Gāthā, and its earliest mention by name is in the Milinda-pañha
(p.408).
It includes gāthas collected together
from various books in the Canon, but contains hardly any from the Jātaka
collection, or directly derived from the Sutta Nipāta.
The present text of the Dhammapada
contains four hundred and twenty-three verses divided into twenty-six vaggas.
So far, five recensions of the
Dhammapada have been discovered. (For details see Law: Pāli Lit., pp.215f).
A commentary on it exists called the
Dhammapadatthakathā.

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