| Quintin Craufurd - 1817 - 758 pàgines
...to use the words of the most venerable text in the Indian scripture, which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate our intellects."* * Jones. Some persons have suggested the idea that the Hindu and Cretan lawgivers were perhaps the... | |
| Ralph Griffiths, George Edward Griffiths - 1818 - 596 pàgines
...greater light, (to use the most .venerable text in the Indian scripture,) " which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate our intellects." ART. II. Memoirs of the Wernerian Natural History Society, Vol.11. Part II. For the Years 1814, 1815,... | |
| Manu (Lawgiver) - 1825 - 488 pàgines
...to use the words of the most venerable text in the Indian scripture, which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate (not our visual organs merely, but our souls and) our intellects. Whatever opinion in short may be... | |
| Manu (Lawgiver) - 1825 - 490 pàgines
...to use the words of the most venerable text in the Indian scripture, which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate (not our visual organs merely, but our souls and) our intellects. Whatever opinion in short may be... | |
| Vans Kennedy - 1831 - 666 pàgines
...venerable text in the Indian scripture, •which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, and to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate our intellects" Mr. Colebrooke, also, in describing the oblation to the sun (Asiat. Res., vol. vp 357.), observes,... | |
| Friedrich von Adelung - 1832 - 270 pàgines
...to use the words of the most venerable text in the Indian Scripture, "which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate (not our visual organs merely, but our souls, etc.) our intellects ra . Sir W. Jones forced upon the... | |
| Charles Coleman - 1832 - 514 pàgines
...(to use the words of the most venerable text in the Indian scriptures) which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which can alone irradiate (not our visual organs merely, but our souls and) our intellects." Their ancient... | |
| James Forbes - 1834 - 586 pàgines
...to use the words of the most venerable text in the Indian Scriptures, which illumines all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate (not our visual organs merely, but our souls, and) our intellects. Whatever opinion, in short, may... | |
| 1840 - 350 pàgines
...solely to meditate upon " the divine and incomparably great light which illumines all, and delights all ; from which all proceed ; to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate our intellects." This is the holy text which even a Brahmin must not articulate ; but which he is required often to... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1860 - 592 pàgines
...visible sun, but the incomparably greater light, according to the Vedas, which illuminates all, delights all, from which all proceed, to which all must return, and which alone can irradiate our souls. 15. MODERN LITERATURES OF INDIA. — The literature of the modern tongues of the Hindus consist... | |
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