I am this or that river, in the same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have come back from the True, know not that they have come back from the True. Whatever these creatures are here, whether a lion, or a wolf, or a boar, or a worm, or a... The Six Systems of Indian Philosophy - Pàgina 166per Friedrich Max Müller - 1899 - 618 pàginesVisualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| 1879 - 468 pàgines
...indeed sea. And as those rivers, when they are in the sea, do not know, I am this or that river, 2. ' In the same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have come back from the True, know not that they have come back from the True. Whatever these creatures... | |
| Friedrich Max Müller - 1893 - 656 pàgines
...9), my son, make honey by collecting the juices of distant trees, and reduce the juice into one form, 'And as these juices have no discrimination, so that they might say, I am the juice of this tree or of that tree, in the same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have become merged in the... | |
| Friedrich Max Müller - 1895 - 682 pàgines
...my son, make honey by collecting the juices of different trees, and reduce the juice into one form, 'And as these juices have no discrimination, so that they might say, I am the juice of this tree or of that tree, in the same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have become merged in the... | |
| Friedrich Max Müller - 1897 - 850 pàgines
...indeed sea. And as those rivers, when they are in the sea, do not know, I am this or that river, 2. 'In the same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have come back from the True, know not that they have come back from the True. Whatever these creatures... | |
| John Thomas Driscoll - 1900 - 372 pàgines
...As the bees make honey by collecting the juices of distant trees and reduce the juice into one form, and as these juices have no discrimination so that...the juice of this tree or that, in the same manner all these creatures, when they have become merged into the True, know not that they are merged into... | |
| Romesh Chunder Dutt, Vincent Arthur Smith, Stanley Lane-Poole, Sir Henry Miers Elliot, William Wilson Hunter, Sir Alfred C. Lyall - 1906 - 410 pàgines
...bees, my son, make honey by collecting the juices of distant trees, and reduce the juice into one form; and as these juices have no discrimination, so that...creatures, when they have become merged in the True, know not that they are merged in the True. " These rivers, my son, run, the eastern (like the Ganges)... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 462 pàgines
...become indeed sea. And those rivers, when they are in the sea, do not know, I am this or that river, 2. 'In the same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have come back from the True, know not that they have come back from the True. Whatever these creatures... | |
| Thakorlal Ranchhodlal Pandya - 1915 - 214 pàgines
...and reduce the juice into one form, and as these juices have no discrimination, so that;they?might say, I am the juice of this tree or that,' in the...creatures, when they have become merged in the True, know not that they are merged into the True."'1) In the same way, he takes the example of iivers merged... | |
| Dorothea Jane Stephen - 1918 - 210 pàgines
...they were before. This is explained by two examples : the juices of the trees become one honey, and : Have no discrimination, so that they might say, I am the juice of this tree or that. Chhand. 6, 9, 2. Or again, the rivers run into the sea, and : When they are in the sea do not know,... | |
| 1920 - 152 pàgines
...the bees make honey by collecting the juices of distant trees, and reduce the juice into one form, "And as these juices have no discrimination, so that...might say, I am the juice of this tree or that, in th« same manner, my son, all these creatures, when they have become merged in the True, either in... | |
| |