bold = Main text
Vol., Sect., Part, Chap., Par. grey = Comment text
1 I, Pref | try to imagine what the Old Testament would have been,
2 I, Pref | Veda, or the Tripitaka is old and genuine, and that this
3 I, Pref | text, three thousand years old, or, even if of more modern
4 I, Pref | impossible to translate old thought into modern speech,
5 I, Pref | rather than to misrepresent old thoughts by clothing them
6 I, Translat | doubt there is much in these old books that is startling
7 I, Intro, 0, 0, 2 | weak woman, and grown too old to give up the observances
8 I, Intro, 0, 0, 3 | properly so called, but to all old prose traditions, whether
9 I, Intro, 0, 0, 5 | they are the work of the old Sankarâkârya, or of the
10 I, Intro, 0, 0, 5 | conjectural emendations. In the old Upanishads the same metrical
11 I, Intro, 0, 0, 5 | would venture to correct so old a mistake?~Again, if in
12 I, 1, 2, 0, 3 | Itihasa-purana (the reading of the old stories) is the flower,
13 I, 1, 2, 0, 3 | ever-present light of the old seed (of the world, the
14 I, 1, 4, 0, 8 | what is left of it, when old age reaches it and scatters
15 I, 1, 4, 0, 8 | Then he should say: 'By the old age of the body, that (the
16 I, 1, 4, 0, 8 | free from sin, free from old age, from death and grief,
17 I, 1, 4, 0, 8 | not pass that bank, nor old age, death, and grief; neither
18 I, 1, 4, 0, 8 | free from sin, free from old age, from death and grief,
19 I, 1, 4, 0, 8 | free from sin, free from old age, from death and grief,
20 I, 2, 0, 0, 0 | have heard from those of old, who taught us this.~5. '
21 I, 3, 2, 1, 1 | transgress it.~3. For the old (sages) did not transgress
22 XV, Intro | sometimes [2] been called the old and genuine Upanishads,
23 XV, Intro | at least one instance.~My old friend, Mr. Nehemiah Goreh-at
24 XV, 1 | Up. I, 12, 3) rests on an old authority.~No doubt, if
25 XV, 1 | work of reconstructing an old text by so-called conjectural
26 XV, 5 | word Kapila occurred in old writings. The question whether
27 XV, 7 | safety of Indra, i.e. of the old faith.~The fact that the
28 XV, 7 | alike to the young and the old, to the Brâhman and the
29 XV, 8, 0, 0, 1 | is afraid on account of old age. Leaving behind both
30 XV, 8, 0, 0, 2 | tell thee this mystery, the old Brahman, and what happens
31 XV, 9, 0, 1, 0 | subject again and again to old age and death.~8. Fools
32 XV, 9, 0, 3, 0 | devayanah), on which the old sages, satisfied in their
33 XV, 11, 2, 3, 5 | thirst ' sorrow, passion, old age, and death. When Brahmanas
34 XV, 11, 2, 4, 3 | body) grows weak through old age, or becomes weak through
35 XV, 11, 3, 0, 4 | these verses:~'The small, old path stretching far away'
36 XV, 11, 3, 0, 4 | Knowing this, the people of old did not wish for offspring.
37 XV, 11, 3, 5, 1 | Brahman. 'There is the old ether (the invisible), and
38 XV, 11, 3, 6, 4 | should be of a young or of an old bull.~19. And then toward
39 XV, 12, 0, 2 | divine Savitri.~5. Your old prayer has to be joined
40 XV, 12, 0, 2 | born.~7. Let us love the old Brahman by the grace of
41 XV, 12, 0, 2 | there is no longer illness, old age, or pain for him who
42 XV, 12, 0, 4 | art maiden; thou, as an old man, totterest along on
43 XV, 14, 0, 1 | not loved, hunger, thirst, old age, death, illness, grief,
44 XV, 14, 0, 6 | the sleepless, free from old age and death, three-footed,
45 XV, 14, 0, 6 | as childhood, youth, and old age; for, because these
46 XV, 14, 0, 6 | the sleepless, free from old age, from death, and sorrow,
47 XV, 14, 0, 6 | bright, sleepless, free from old age, from death, and sorrow.
48 XV, 14, 0, 6 | that he is: this is the old secret.~(4) By the serenity
49 XV, 14, 0, 7 | of light, without sleep, old age, death, and sorrow.~
50 XV, 14, 0, 7 | free from sin, free from old age, from death and grief,
|