The Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland, Volume 2The Branch, 1887 - Archaeology |
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Page 17
... live long in the enjoyment of health . The fourth is , having obtained wealth in conjunction with piety , having been applauded by relatives and judicious friends , and having lived long in the enjoyment of health , to obtain , upon the ...
... live long in the enjoyment of health . The fourth is , having obtained wealth in conjunction with piety , having been applauded by relatives and judicious friends , and having lived long in the enjoyment of health , to obtain , upon the ...
Page 18
... lives free from the defiling influence of avarice . This constitutes the being endued with liberality . " What is the being endued with Wisdom ? He who is avari- cious , covetous , and subject to hardness of heart , does that which is ...
... lives free from the defiling influence of avarice . This constitutes the being endued with liberality . " What is the being endued with Wisdom ? He who is avari- cious , covetous , and subject to hardness of heart , does that which is ...
Page 19
... live peaceably and virtuously , and by the exercise of self control subdue and extinguish their passions . By their means he provides for himself future happiness , a residence in one of the heavens , continued pleasure and celestial ...
... live peaceably and virtuously , and by the exercise of self control subdue and extinguish their passions . By their means he provides for himself future happiness , a residence in one of the heavens , continued pleasure and celestial ...
Page 23
... lives without slandering others . He does not , in order to promote divisions , detail in one place that which he has heard in another , but is a reconciler of differences and a strengthener of friendships : he lives in peace , delights ...
... lives without slandering others . He does not , in order to promote divisions , detail in one place that which he has heard in another , but is a reconciler of differences and a strengthener of friendships : he lives in peace , delights ...
Page 25
... lives we take refuge in Gotama . " MAHÁ DHAMMA SAMÁDÁNA SUTTAN . THE LARGER DISCOURSE ON THE RESULTS OF CONDUct . When Bhagawa was residing near Sewet , in the monastery founded by Anáthapindika at Jétawana , he called his priests ...
... lives we take refuge in Gotama . " MAHÁ DHAMMA SAMÁDÁNA SUTTAN . THE LARGER DISCOURSE ON THE RESULTS OF CONDUct . When Bhagawa was residing near Sewet , in the monastery founded by Anáthapindika at Jétawana , he called his priests ...
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abundant Alwis appear Badulla birds Blyth brown Budha called Ceylon Chilaw cocoanut coffee collected Colombo colour Committee common consisting cultivation Cypselus D. J. Gogerly District doctrines E. L. Layard English Falco feet Genus Grammar guilty of Dukkata Gygax inches Indian insect Island Jaffna jaggery Journal jungle Kandy Kandyan Kelaart king labour language larvæ laterite letter lime Linn Meeting Members Mohammed Museum natives Natural History nests nobis Nuwara Eliya observed obtained paddy Páli Páli and Sanskrit paper plant poem treating poets Point Pedro present priesthood priests prisoners procured produce Puránam Puttalam quantity received rocks Rodiyas Royal Asiatic Society rufous Sangho Sanskrit Secretary shells Siņ Sinhalese Sinhalese language Society's species specimens spots stanzas sugar tail Tamil Tamil Language toddy toes translation tree Trincomalee Upasampada wing wood yellow
Popular passages
Page 265 - AND seeing the multitudes, he went up into a mountain: and when he was set, his disciples came unto him: And he opened his mouth, and taught them, saying, Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Page 264 - When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray ; What charm can soothe her melancholy, What art can wash her guilt away ? The only art her guilt to cover, To hide her shame from every eye, To give repentance to her lover, And wring his bosom — is to die.
Page 251 - The Sanscrit language, whatever be its antiquity, is of a wonderful structure; more perfect than the Greek, more copious than the Latin, and more exquisitely refined than either, yet bearing to both of them a stronger affinity, both in the roots of verbs and in the forms of grammar, than could possibly have been produced by accident; so strong indeed, that no philologer could examine them all three, without believing them to have sprung from some common source, which, perhaps, no longer exists...
Page 297 - Yet empty of all good, wherein consists Woman's domestic honour and chief praise; Bred only and completed to the taste Of lustful appetence, to sing, to dance, To dress, and troll the tongue, and roll the eye...
Page 139 - return to the world ". To test the qualifications of every candidate for receiving the ordination, Gautama therefore inaugurated eleven questions 1 : — Are you afflicted with the following diseases : leprosy, boils, dry leprosy, consumption, or fits ? Are you a human being ? Are you a male ? Are you a freeman ? Have you no debts ? Are you not in the royal (military) service ? Have your father and mother given their consent ? Are you full twenty years old ? Are your alms-bowl and your robes in...
Page cvii - The President, and in his absence the Vice-President, shall take the Chair at all meetings of the Society and of the Committee, maintain order, collect the votes, and cause the laws of the Society to be observed and enforced.
Page 279 - ... 3. The eloped wife glistened with (her) streaming tears; 4. The jungle was bent with (the weight of) the dew upon the tender leaves." The same elegant writer has given us several puns of this kind: of which the reader will observe, the following stanza, consisting of 10 letters in each line, when divided into two, may be read without the second half, by supplying its place with the first half read from the last letter; or, from the end to the beginning, and from the beginning to end, as in the...
Page lxxv - Nupalese say that any of their books now existent, which is made of Palmira leaves, may be safely pronounced, on that account, to be 500 years old : whence we may, perhaps, infer that the paper manufacture was founded about that time.
Page 212 - Hills near Madras, where it rests on granite, and its interstratified beds of lignite and silicified wood, militate strongly against this theory. Besides, nothing is more common in lateritic tracts than to see a hill of granite, trap, or hypogene rock, capped with a thick crust of laterite; while the adjacent hills, composed of an exactly similar rock, and forming a continuation of the same bed, equally exposed to the action of the weather, are quite bare of laterite.
Page 89 - The Veddahs are mostly low in stature, but some of them are strong, active men, and most of them appear to be healthy and little subject to disease.