The Upanishads: The Khândogya-upanishadClarendon Press, 1879 |
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Page x
... whole- some and matter - of - fact atmosphere in which alone it can produce valuable and permanent results . The time has come when the study of the ancient religions of mankind must be approached in a dif- ferent , in a less ...
... whole- some and matter - of - fact atmosphere in which alone it can produce valuable and permanent results . The time has come when the study of the ancient religions of mankind must be approached in a dif- ferent , in a less ...
Page xi
... whole truth ; and if the whole truth must be told , it is that , however radiant the dawn of religious thought , it is not without its dark clouds , its chilling colds , its noxious vapours . Whoever does not know these , or would hide ...
... whole truth ; and if the whole truth must be told , it is that , however radiant the dawn of religious thought , it is not without its dark clouds , its chilling colds , its noxious vapours . Whoever does not know these , or would hide ...
Page xv
... whole chapters which either never had any life or meaning at all , or if they had , have , in the form in which they have come down to us , com- pletely lost it . We must try to imagine what the Old Testament would have been , if it had ...
... whole chapters which either never had any life or meaning at all , or if they had , have , in the form in which they have come down to us , com- pletely lost it . We must try to imagine what the Old Testament would have been , if it had ...
Page xvii
... whole , ' adding that ' what they contain would hardly reward the labour of the reader ; much less that of the translator ' . ' The former went still further in the condemnation which he pronounced on Anquetil Duperron's translation of ...
... whole , ' adding that ' what they contain would hardly reward the labour of the reader ; much less that of the translator ' . ' The former went still further in the condemnation which he pronounced on Anquetil Duperron's translation of ...
Page xxiii
... whole chapter seems at first sight unintelligible in a translation , that therefore they are indeed devoid of all meaning . What can be more perplexing than the beginning of the Khandogya - upanishad ? ' Let a man medi- tate , ' we read ...
... whole chapter seems at first sight unintelligible in a translation , that therefore they are indeed devoid of all meaning . What can be more perplexing than the beginning of the Khandogya - upanishad ? ' Let a man medi- tate , ' we read ...
Common terms and phrases
adhyâya Âditya Agni Agnihotra ancient Anquetil Duperron Âranyaka Asuras Bâlâki becomes body Brahman Brâhmana Brihati called cattle CLARENDON PRESS Comm commentary commentator Crown 8vo deity Demy 8vo desires Devas earth English ether explained father FIFTH KHANDA fire foot of Brahman Gâyatrî glory of countenance gods heaven highest hinkâra Hiranyagarbha hymn immortal Indra Introduction and Notes KHANDA knowledge knows living M.A. Extra fcap M.A. Second Edition Mahâvrata Max Müller means meditates metre mind moon nidhana oblation obtains offspring OXFORD performed Pragâpati pragńâ Prâna breath prastâva pratihâra purusha recites replied Rig-veda Rishi Sacred Books sacrifice Sâma-veda Sâman Samhitâ Sankara Sanskrit Sâyana sense speech stiff covers stoma Sűdadohas Svarga syllables thou translation trikas Trishtubh true Udgâtri udgitha uktha Upanishad Vâyu Veda Vedic Verily Virâg W. W. Skeat word