A Classical Dictionary of Hindu Mythology and Religion, Geography, History, and LiteratureTrübner & Company, 1870 - 411 pages |
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Page 5
... marriage by Agastya . Much against his will the king was constrained to consent , and she became the wife of the sage . She was named Lopa - mudra , because the animals had been subjected to loss ( lopa ) by her engrossing their ...
... marriage by Agastya . Much against his will the king was constrained to consent , and she became the wife of the sage . She was named Lopa - mudra , because the animals had been subjected to loss ( lopa ) by her engrossing their ...
Page 10
... married a slave and had children , of whom he was very fond . I. A AJATA - SATRU . ' One whose enemy is unborn . ' king of Kāsī , mentioned in the Upanishads , who was very learned , and , although a Kshatriya , instructed the Brahman ...
... married a slave and had children , of whom he was very fond . I. A AJATA - SATRU . ' One whose enemy is unborn . ' king of Kāsī , mentioned in the Upanishads , who was very learned , and , although a Kshatriya , instructed the Brahman ...
Page 17
... married his cousin , Su - bhadrā . A Daitya princess named Ushā , daughter of Bāna , fell in love with him , and had him brought by magic influence to her apartments in her father's city of Sonita - pura . Bāna sent some guards to seize ...
... married his cousin , Su - bhadrā . A Daitya princess named Ushā , daughter of Bāna , fell in love with him , and had him brought by magic influence to her apartments in her father's city of Sonita - pura . Bāna sent some guards to seize ...
Page 22
... married Chitrangadā , the daughter of the king of Manipura , by whom he had a son named Babhru - vāhana . He visited Krishna at Dwarakā , and there he married Su - bhadra , the sister of Krishna . ( See Su - bhadra . ) By her he had a ...
... married Chitrangadā , the daughter of the king of Manipura , by whom he had a son named Babhru - vāhana . He visited Krishna at Dwarakā , and there he married Su - bhadra , the sister of Krishna . ( See Su - bhadra . ) By her he had a ...
Page 25
... married a daughter of his preceptor , Uddālaka , but he was so devoted to study that he neglected his wife . When she was far advanced in her pregnancy , the unborn son was provoked at his father's neglect of her , and rebuked him for ...
... married a daughter of his preceptor , Uddālaka , but he was so devoted to study that he neglected his wife . When she was far advanced in her pregnancy , the unborn son was provoked at his father's neglect of her , and rebuked him for ...
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Common terms and phrases
According Aditi Agni Arjuna Asuras Aswins Avatāra Bala-rāma became Bhāgavata Bharata Bhima Bhishma Bhrigu Bibliotheca Indica birth born Brahman Brihaspati brother called celebrated chariot curse Daitya Daksha Dasa-ratha daughter of Daksha deity demon descended Dhrita-rashtra divine drama Draupadi Drona Dur-yodhana Durgā earth father female fire forest Gandharvas Ganges gave goddess gods Hari-vansa heaven Hindu horse husband hymns incarnation India Indra Karna Kāsī Kasyapa Kauravas killed king Krishna Kshatriya Kuvera Lakshmana legend Linga lord Lunar race Mahā-bhārata Manu Meru mother mountain Nala nymph ocean Pandavas Pandu Parasu-rāma personified Pitris poem Prajapati priest princes Purāna Rāja Rakshasas Rāma Rāmāyana Rāvana represented Rig-veda Rishi river Rudra sacrifice sage Sanhita Sanskrit Saraswati Satapatha Brahmana says serpent seven Sītā Siva Solar race Soma sons sprang story told translated Upanishad Varuna Vasishtha Vayu Vedas Vedic verses Vishnu Vishnu Purāna Viswamitra Vyasa wife worship Yadavas Yajnawalkya Yama Yudhi-shthira
Popular passages
Page 142 - Willst du was reizt und entziickt, willst du was sattigt und nahrt, Willst du den Himmel, die Erde, mit Einem Namen begreifen; Nenn' ich, Sakontala, Dich, und so ist Alles gesagt.
Page x - Nowhere is the wide distance which separates the ancient poems of India from the most ancient literature of Greece more clearly felt than when we compare the growing myths of the Veda with the full-grown and decayed myths on which the poetry of Homer is founded. The Veda is the real Theogony of the Aryan races, while that of Hesiod is a distorted caricature of the original image.
Page 350 - Eakshasa are objects of horror whom the gods ward off and destroy ; the divinities of the Atharva are regarded rather with a kind of cringing fear, as powers whose wrath is to be deprecated and whose favour curried...
Page 107 - He is represented as a short fat man of a yellow colour, with a protuberant belly, four hands, and the head of an elephant, which has only one tusk. In...
Page 146 - Desire first arose in It, which was the primal germ of mind ; [and which] sages, searching with their intellect, have discovered in their heart to be the bond which connects entity with non-entity.