The Great Indian Epics: The Stories of the Rāmāyana and the Mahābhārata

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G. Routledge, 1895 - 231 páginas
 

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Página 210 - Khan. The consequence was that in three or four months I translated two, out 'of eighteen sections, at the puerile absurdities of which the eighteen thousand creations may well be amazed. Such injunctions as one never heard of. What not to eat, and a prohibition against turnips ! But such is my fate, to be employed in such works. Nevertheless, I console myself with the reflection that what is predestined must come to pass.
Página 189 - If the light of a thousand suns were to burst forth at once in the sky, that would be like the splendour of that mighty One.
Página 102 - If thy son, friend, brother, father, or even spiritual preceptor, becometh thy foe, thou shouldst, if desirous of prosperity, slay him without scruples. By curses and incantations, by gift of wealth, by poison, or by deception, the foe should be slain. He should never be neglected from disdain.
Página 222 - On failure of issue by the husband, if he be ' of the servile class, the desired offspring may be ' procreated, either by his brother or some other * sapinda, on the wife, who has been duly au1 thorized : 60. ' Sprinkled with clarified butter, silent, in the * night, let the kinsman thus appointed beget one ' son, but a second by no means, on the widow or * childless wife : 61.
Página 18 - the performance of penances was like making deposits in the bank of heaven. By degrees an enormous credit was accumulated which enabled the depositor to draw to the amount of his savings, without fear of his drafts being refused payment. The power gained in this way by weak mortals was so enormous, that gods as well as men were equally at the mercy of these all but omnipotent ascetics...
Página 5 - The Aryan offshoots, alike to the east and to the west, asserted their superiority over the earlier peoples whom they found in possession of the soil. The history of ancient Europe is the story of the Aryan settlements around the shores of the Mediterranean ; and that wide term, modern civilization, merely means the civilization of the western branches of the same race. The history of India consists in like manner of the history of the eastern offshoots of the Aryan stock who settled in that land.
Página 128 - ... tirthas on their route, till they found themselves in the Himalayas. Pushing into the sacred solitude of these giant mountains they met with many adventures, in which Bhima's son, Ghatotkacha, was very helpful to them. At last, from a lofty summit, these fortunate travellers got a glimpse of the abode of Kuvera, the god of wealth, " adorned with golden and crystal palaces, surrounded on all sides by golden walls having the splendour of all gems, furnished with gardens all around, higher than...
Página 204 - Perhaps, we have not worshipped the deities that cause calamities, or perhaps, we have not paid them the first homage. Or, perhaps, this evil is the certain consequence of the birds ( we saw ). Our stars are not unpropitious. From what other cause, then hath this disaster come?
Página 147 - For the sake of a family an individual may be sacrificed ; for the sake of a village a family may be sacrificed ; for the sake of a province a village may be sacrificed ; and, lastly, for the sake of one's self the whole earth may be sacrificed ; " and concluded with this exhortation : " O monarch, binding Duryodhana fast, make peace with the Pandavas. O bull among Kshtriyas let not the whole Kshatriya race be slaughtered on thy account.

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