Book, Chapter
1 2 | the monarchs of Northern India were invited, and the bride
2 3 | among the Aryan Hindus of India. It is distinctly prohibited
3 3 | all the kings of ancient India. His brothers went out with
4 5 | and poor, in all parts of India; and on a certain night
5 5 | instruction to the millions of India the value of which cannot
6 6 | with the kings of ancient India, as with the chiefs of ancient
7 7 | been witnessed in Northern India.~The portions translated
8 8 | fought on the plains of India in the ancient times. It
9 8 | warlike races in Northern India took a share in it.~Duryodhan'
10 Epi | TRANSLATOR'S EPILOGUE~ANCIENT India, like ancient Greece, boasts
11 Epi | warlike races of Northern India took a share, and may therefore
12 Epi | wildernesses of Southern India, and may therefore be compared
13 Epi | Epics, the Iliad of Ancient India, which is the subject of
14 Epi | in the courts of Northern India. The war thus became the
15 Epi | songs, and poems in ancient India, even as Charlemagne and
16 Epi | is invariably the case in India, the thread of a high moral
17 Epi | distant nation in Northern India was anxious to interpolate
18 Epi | myths, for which ancient India was famous, found a shelter
19 Epi | the prevailing religion of India after the decay of Buddhism,
20 Epi | has also been published in India, and is useful to Sanscrit
21 Epi | and knowledge of Ancient India. And it discloses to us
22 Epi | has passed away. Northern India was then parcelled among
23 Epi | of Buddha, proclaimed in India five centuries before Christ,
24 Epi | rest, the people of modem India know how to appreciate their
25 Epi | moral education. Mothers in India know no better theme for
26 Epi | same extent as the Epics of India are of the Hindus. No single
27 Epi | Maha-bharata and the Ramayana in India. They have been the cherished
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