Buddhaghosha's ParablesTübner, 1870 - 206 pages |
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Page xvi
... took place . In fact , it is to Budhagosa that the people living on the shores of the Gulf of Martaban owe the possession of the Budhist scriptures . From Thaton , the collection made by Budhagosa was transferred to Pagan , six hundred ...
... took place . In fact , it is to Budhagosa that the people living on the shores of the Gulf of Martaban owe the possession of the Budhist scriptures . From Thaton , the collection made by Budhagosa was transferred to Pagan , six hundred ...
Page l
... took it for an aggregate com- pound . But such aggregate compounds , in Sanskrit at least , are possibly only with numerals , as , for in- stance , Tri - bhuvanam , the three worlds , katuryugam , the four ages . It might , therefore ...
... took it for an aggregate com- pound . But such aggregate compounds , in Sanskrit at least , are possibly only with numerals , as , for in- stance , Tri - bhuvanam , the three worlds , katuryugam , the four ages . It might , therefore ...
Page 4
... took up his residence in a forest , where he occupied himself in repeating the Kammatthana . The people of the village felt kindly towards them , and offered them boiled rice , and Mahāpāla and the sixty Rahans received daily alms of ...
... took up his residence in a forest , where he occupied himself in repeating the Kammatthana . The people of the village felt kindly towards them , and offered them boiled rice , and Mahāpāla and the sixty Rahans received daily alms of ...
Page 14
... took with him the whole of his attendant priesthood and went into the Savatthi country . As soon as he reached the door of the house of the Thuthe Adinnapubbaka , he despatched his sacred appearance to the Thuthe's son , who directly he ...
... took with him the whole of his attendant priesthood and went into the Savatthi country . As soon as he reached the door of the house of the Thuthe Adinnapubbaka , he despatched his sacred appearance to the Thuthe's son , who directly he ...
Page 15
... took comfort ; then he said , " Are you a Katu Mahārāga Nat , ' or are you the Sakka King ? " The Nat's son replied , " I was Maddhakundali , the Thuthe's son . Because at the point of death my heart was filled with faith and love ...
... took comfort ; then he said , " Are you a Katu Mahārāga Nat , ' or are you the Sakka King ? " The Nat's son replied , " I was Maddhakundali , the Thuthe's son . Because at the point of death my heart was filled with faith and love ...
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Common terms and phrases
Anavatatta Anuruddha Ariya asked became become a Rahan Benares Bhikshu birth Brâhmana Brahmin Buddha Buddhaghosha Buddhist Burmese Burnouf called CHAPTER cloth daughter death Devala Dhamma Dhammapada DICTIONARY disciples Edited elephant English evil deeds existence F. J. FURNIVALL Fausböll gave Getavana monastery girl gods gold Gotama GRAMMAR happiness hell homage hundred India kalpas Kassapa Khugguttara King Udena king's Kulla-Panthaka LANGUAGE live Lord and master lord Sariputta Lotus Magandiya Mahādūta Mahākāla Mâra means Nat country Nat-King Nat's Nibbana Nirvâna nobles offering Pakkekabuddha palace Pâli Parā Para Taken parables preached the law priesthood priests princess probationer Professor Pyathat queen Rahanda Rahans replied rice Rishi Royal Royal Asiatic Society sacred Samavati Sanskrit Sariputta Savatthi Savatthi country saying sense sewed slaves Sotapatti Sramana STORY thabet thou thought thousand Thugyuè Thuthe Thuthe's translated Udena verse Vipassana wife wise words yoganas young
Popular passages
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Page lxv - Earnest among the thoughtless, awake among the sleepers, the wise man advances like a racer, leaving behind the hack.
Page lv - THAT WE ARE is the result of what we have thought: it is founded on our thoughts, it is made up of our thoughts.
Page lxxiii - Death carries off a man who is gathering flowers and whose mind is distracted, as a flood carries off a sleeping village.
Page cxlii - ... painful it is to dwell with equals (to share everything in common), and the itinerant mendicant is beset with pain. Therefore let no man be an itinerant mendicant, and he will not be beset with pain.
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Page lxxxix - One's own self conquered is better than all other people ; not even a god, a Gandharva, not Mara (with Brahman), could change into defeat the victory of a man who has vanquished himself, and always lives under restraint.
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