13th-crisp | criti-guild | guilt-never | new-c-sin-d | singe-waysi | weake-zephy
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2501 3, 3 | various diverse maxims taught,~Weaker reasons seemed the stronger,
2502 7, 10| Indra-prastha which my father weakly to Yudhishthir gave,~Nevermore
2503 5, 4 | asrams holy women love to wear.~And the aged queen she
2504 9, 3 | darkening shadows close around,~Wearied warriors seek for shelter
2505 10, 2 | little need is there, I ween,~Arjun is not wont to tarry
2506 7, 7 | warning thou hast in thy bosom weighed,~Peerless in their godlike
2507 10, 3 | is a word of truth and weight.~Nathless thy advice for
2508 7, 1 | before the monarchs thus in weighty accents laid.~"Known to
2509 10, 1 | of war,~And the echoing welkin answered shouts that nations
2510 1, 5 | crowds pass by,~Hark! Like welkin-shaking thunder wakes a deep and
2511 1, 4 | unceasing swayed,~One and twenty well-aimed arrows on this moving mark
2512 Epi | Sanscrit Epic is written in the well-known Sloka metre of sixteen syllables
2513 3, 7 | pious-hearted chief,~Sad Yudhishthir wended homeward andhis heart was
2514 4, 6 | paths we fearless tread!"~Wet her eyes and loose her tresses,
2515 8, 1 | chieftains perished and what-countless soldiers fell.~And the son
2516 8, 2 | his son among his foes,~Wheeled from far his battle-chariot
2517 6, 4 | knew the wondrous bowman, wheeling round the battle-car,~And
2518 6, 4 | chieftains, gallant Arjun wheels his sounding battle-car,~'
2519 | Wherever
2520 8, 10| though he loved not Bhishma whilst the chieftain lived in fame,~
2521 10, 2 | flying coursers with the whip and loosened rein,~Often
2522 4, 6 | thy cruel brothers part?"~Whispering words of consolation, Pritha'
2523 2, 5 | fell and faltered, merry whispers went around,~And the sound
2524 Epi | echoing jungle; the flight of whistling arrows suggests the flight
2525 8, 10| onward way,~And as myriad white-winged sea-birds swoop upon the
2526 12, 3 | whose flesh is pure and wholesome, dwellers of the lake or
2527 11, 5 | by the sorrowing train,~Wide-expanding, vast and sealike, formeda
2528 9, 1 | heroes and their clubs were wielded well,~Till by many blows
2529 End | Abhimanyu son of Arjun, wielding Arjun's peerless might,~
2530 5, 1 | faithful wife,~With a stronger wif e's affection, with a sadder
2531 12, 3 | gladdening every living wight,~Round the altar's holy
2532 1, 4 | pierced them one and all!~Wild-boar shaped in plates of iron
2533 5, 4 | Gaily with the gathered wild-fruits did the prince his basket
2534 2, 7 | gallant Arjun rose!~With a wilder rage the monarchs viewed
2535 Epi | wandering for long years in the wildernesses of Southern India, and may
2536 11, 1 | mares that scour the plain,~Wildly toss their flowing tresses,
2537 4, 5 | mortals who may win by wicked wile,~Sorrow brings no shame
2538 9, 5 | his sacred duty, and 'tis willed by Heaven on high,~Arjun
2539 5, 2 | heart like thine,~And HE wills,--a noble daughter grace
2540 3, 4 | the sun's returning ray,~Windless wastes are waked to gladness
2541 2, 2 | lighted, golden nets the windows laced,~Spacious stairs so
2542 7, 5 | they will quaff the ruddy wine,~Greet their foes in mutual
2543 6, 3 | bright,~Parrot feathers wing these arrows whetted and
2544 1, 9 | Prince Duryodhan is the winner!" Various thus the people
2545 2, 3 | Draupadi, queen of every winning charm!~Then a Brahman versed
2546 8, 8 | beauty, with thy mother's winsome eye,~Art thou slain, my
2547 12, 1 | is approaching, and the winter passeth by,~Let the Brahmans
2548 12, 3 | the poor and lowly, mercy wipes the mourner's tear,~Tender
2549 5, 3 | exclaimed the rishi, "fault that wipeth all his grace,~Fault that
2550 9, 1 | bound their maces and the wire of twisted gold,~Whirling
2551 4, 5 | spake unto his kinsmen, wishing good for evil done,~And
2552 9, 2 | chieftains to their nightly tents withdrew~
2553 4, 3 | on Karna like a tongue of withering flame,~Bound by elder's
2554 5, 3 | the gifts of art,~Blest withwisdom and with prowess, patient
2555 11, 5 | the sacred water sorrowing wives and mothers made.~And so
2556 1, 6 | sprinkled waters roused the woe-distracted dame,~And she saw her sons
2557 6, 3 | princess, purest best of womankind,~Doth she wander with Yudhishthir,
2558 5, 2 | splendour in its happy mother's womb,~And in fulness of the season
2559 Epi | expanding wings of this wonderful Epic; and as Krishna-worship
2560 9, 3 | surrounding banters slain,~Like a wood-consuming wildfire quenched upon the
2561 2, 4 | and lordly on Himalay's wooded side!~Each his rival marks
2562 5, 2 | golden chariot unto sylvan woodlands went.~Far in pleasant woods
2563 Epi | be told."~Another earnest worker of the present day, who
2564 7, 3 | son,~Vanquish Karna though world-honoured for his deeds of valour
2565 8, 10| who submits, fatigued and worn,~Bhishma doth not fight
2566 3, 6 | another's loving bride?~Do thy worst! Or if by anger or by weak
2567 10, 2 | yield thy famed Gandiva unto worthier hands than thine,~On some
2568 6, 3 | prince of Matsya, thou wouldst know,~Arjun's sword is toad-engraven,
2569 9, 3 | felt the cruel cureless wound,~"Brave and gallant boy!"
2570 6 | had concealed in a tree, wrapped like human corpses to frighten
2571 10, 3 | vow he made,~Brave Satyaki wreak his vengeance for his sons
2572 6, 1 | Eight and twenty days we wrestled, many warlike chiefs were
2573 4, 6 | my love?~Woe to me, your wretched mother, woe to her who gave
2574 5, 5 | it life!~And our sacred writ ordaineth and our pious
2575 Epi | translation, but virtually to write a new poem; and that was
2576 9, 1 | carried from the field,~Writhing like a wounded serpent,
2577 Epi | together with the tractarian writings of Newman, Keble, and Pusey,
2578 3, 4 | the arghya, so our holy writs have said,~Therefore to
2579 Epi | of tile Sanscrit Epic is written in the well-known Sloka
2580 10, 2 | ever-loving heart:~"Arjun, I have wronged thee brother, and no fault
2581 Epi | languages. What Homer actually wrote, a numerous class of students
2582 7 | from Sections i., ii. iii., xciv., cxxiv., and exxvi. of
2583 12 | BOOK XII - ASWA-MEDHA~(Sacrifice
2584 12 | lxxxviii. and lxxxix. of Book xiv. of the original text.~
2585 6 | Sections xxxv., xxxvi., xl. to xliii., a portion of
2586 6 | Sections xxxv., xxxvi., xl. to xliii., a portion of Section xliv.,
2587 11 | x., portions of Sections xvi., xvii., and xxvi., and
2588 11 | portions of Sections xvi., xvii., and xxvi., and the whole
2589 11 | Sections xvi., xvii., and xxvi., and the whole of Section
2590 11 | and the whole of Section xxvii. of Book xi. of the original
2591 3 | this Book forms Sections xxxiii. To xxxvi. and Section xliv.
2592 6 | this Book form Sections xxxv., xxxvi., xl. to xliii.,
2593 5, 5 | back his wealth and kingdom,Y AMA, in thy mercy speak!"~
2594 End | after, and the city of the Yadavas is swallowed up by the ocean.~
2595 2, 4 | Winged Suparnas, scaly Yagas, saints celestial pure and
2596 12 | Brihaspati, of Vyasa and Suka, of Yajnavalkya and Janaka, of Narada and
2597 11, 3 | Heaven avert a cruel fate,~Yato dharma stato jayah! Triumph
2598 5, 3 | ancient monarchs led,~Like Yayati open-hearted and like CHANDRA
2599 5, 6 | reply,~"Pains my heart and yearns my bosom, let us to their
2600 | Yes
2601 12 | explains Sankhya philosophy and Yoga philosophy, and lays down
2602 11, 1 | s last wishes! Henchmen, yoke my royal car,~Dhrita-rashtra
2603 11, 1 | As when ends the mortal's Yuga and the end of world is
2604 11, 4 | grace,~Spake unto the brave Yuyutsu, Kuru's last surviving chief,~
2605 8, 3 | matchless might,~With a halting zeal for Kurus doth the noble
2606 8 | caste he may belong, the zealous performance of his duty
2607 9, 4 | Now the sun from highest zenith red and fiery radiance lent,~
2608 9, 4 | them beside a river by the zephyrs soft caressed,~Gave unto
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