Book, Chapter
1 3, 2| his diksha, and to holy work inclined,~To his friends
2 6, 4| car-borne warriors, other work to-day is mine,~Meet Duryodhan
3 7, 5| boundless sway,~Nations work his righteous mandates and
4 8 | of Duty in that memorable work called the Bhagavat-gita
5 8 | underlying thought of this work, and ever and anon, as Professor
6 8 | obligations is his most important work."~Duryodhan chose the grand
7 8, 3| Arjun! warrior's wonted work to know,~Krishna with his
8 10, 4| of day!~Done the ghastly work of slaughter, Aswa-thaman
9 Epi | were incorporated in the work which appealed to the nation
10 Epi | shape. It is thus that the work went on growing for a thousand
11 Epi | further expansion of the work. The contents of the Epic
12 Epi | great Epic-the greatest work of imagination that Asia
13 Epi | add to the interest of the work. If the religious works
14 Epi | longing to undertake this work, but the task was by no
15 Epi | about one-fourth of the work; and a complete translation
16 Epi | narrated in the original work in passages which are neither
17 Epi | as told in the original work. The advantage of this arrangement
18 Epi | generally adopted in the present work. Except in the three books
19 Epi | passages of the original work. I have not attempted to
20 Epi | an account of each day's work. In order to do so, I have
21 Epi | that of other heroes. No work of the imagination that
22 Epi | Epic, and which spoil the work as an Epic, have themselves
23 Epi | preserved in the Epics. No work in Europe, not Homer in
24 Epi | of the Hindus. No single work except the Bible has such
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