Dhamma Vagga.-The ninth chapter of the Duka Nipáta of the Anguttara Nikáya. 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 Sajjháya 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 Nává Sutta.


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