The Works of Sir William Jones, Volume 4J. Stockdale and J. Walker, 1807 |
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afferted affuming affured aftronomers alfo alſo ancient anſwered Arabick beautiful becauſe beſt BHAIRAVA bloffoms bofom BRAHMA BUDDHA called cauſe Chaturanga cloſe compofed confifts CRISHNA damfel defcribed defire divine eſpecially expreffed eyes faid fame fays fecond feemed feven fhall fince firft firſt flowers folar fome foul ftars fubject fuch fuppofed fyftem grant flowers heart HERI himſelf Hindus houſe hundred India Indian INDRA iſland itſelf juſt king laſt leaſt lotos lunar Magadha manfion meaſure MENU modes moon moſt mufick muft muſt night obfervation paffage paffed paffion Pandits Perfian perfon pleaſure prefent preſerved prince purpoſe RA'DHA raiſed reaſon reſembles Sanferit ſeems ſeven ſeveral ſhe ſhould ſhowed ſmall SO'MA ſome ſpirit śruti ſtars ſuch ſuppoſed ſyſtem thee themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand tion tranflation univerſe uſed Véda's Védas verſe VISHNU VYA'SA weft whofe whoſe YAMA
Popular passages
Page 323 - Vyasa, who explains, at the king's request, the form of the fictitious warfare, and the principal rules of it. " Having marked eight squares on all sides...
Page 170 - Shiraz, where he distinctly saw the nightingales trying to vie with the musician; sometimes warbling on the trees, sometimes fluttering from branch to branch, as if they wished to approach the instrument whence the melody proceeded, and at length dropping on the ground, in a kind of ecstasy, from which they were soon raised, he assured me, by a change of the mode.
Page 217 - Sufis would consider them as an epitome of their common system; for they concur in believing, that the souls of men differ infinitely in degree, but not at all in kind, from the divine spirit, of which they are particles, and in which they will ultimately be absorbed...
Page 352 - It is an attested fact, that if a ring be dropped into a deep well, and a signal given to him, he will fly down with amazing celerity, catch the ring before it touches the water...
Page 204 - We may add, that the Hindu poets never fail to change the metre, which is their mode, according to the change of...
Page 223 - I was assured that we were His, and He ours. ' Where are the glad tidings of union with thee, that I may abandon all desire of life ? I am a bird of holiness, and would fain escape from the net of this world. ' Shed, O Lord, from the cloud of heavenly guidance, one cheering shower, before the moment when I must rise up like a particle of dry dust.
Page 364 - As to his country," says the author last quoted, " the first of the species that I saw in India was in the district of Tipra, properly Tripura, whither it had been brought, like mine, from the Garrow Mountains; and Dr. Anderson informs me that it is found in the woods on the coast of Coromandel : another...
Page 357 - There are in our Indian provinces many animals, and many hundreds of medicinal plants, which have either not been defcribed at all, or, what is worfe, ill defcribed by the naturalifts of Europe ; and to procure...
Page 262 - His azure breast glittered with pearls of unblemished lustre, like the full bed of the cerulean Yamuna, interspersed with curls of white foam. From his graceful waist flowed a pale yellow robe, which resembled the golden dust of the water-lily scattered over its blue petals.
Page 269 - Englijh intelligibly j and fome appeared vain of titles, which our countrymen had given them in play, according to their fuppofed ftations. We had Lords, Dukes, and Princes on board, foliciting our cuftom, and importuning us for prefents.