GOD, and the harsh admonitions even to kings, are truly noble ; and the many panegyricks on the Gayatri, the Mother, as it is called, of the Veda, prove the author to have adored (not the visible material sun, but) that divine and incomparably greater... Works - Page 205by Sir William Jones - 1807Full view - About this book
| Har Bilas Sarda (Diwan Bahadur) - Hindus - 1906 - 506 pages
...respectful awe. The sentiments of independence on all beings but God, and the harsh administrations even to kings are truly noble, and the many panegyrics on the Gayatri prove the author to have adored that divine and incomparably-greater light which illumines all, delights... | |
| Edward Moor - Art, Hindu - 1999 - 702 pages
...translation in the following passage, the words in Italics being those immediately of the text:— " The many panegyrics on the Gayatri, the Mother, as it is called, of the yedas, prove the author to have adored, not the visible material sun, but that divine and incomparably... | |
| Mia Carter, Barbara Harlow - History - 2003 - 836 pages
...all beings but GOD, and the harsh admonitions even to kings are truly noble; and the many panegyricks on the Gayatri, the Mother, as it is called, of the Veda, prove the author to have adored (not the visible material sun, but) that divine and incomparably greater light, to use the words of the most... | |
| G.C. Haughton - 412 pages
...respectful awe ; the sentiments of independence on all beings but GOD, and the harsh adoionitions- even to kings, are truly noble ; and the many panegyrics on the Gdyatri, the Mother, as it is called, of the Veda, prove the author to have adored (not the visible... | |
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