The Legends and Theories of the Buddhists: Compared with History and Science: with Introductory Notices of the Life and System of Gotama Buddha |
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Page ix
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. return to England , for the third time , in June last , with thankfulness for the evidences I had been permitted to witness , on the part of many of the more intelligent of the Singhalese , of a sincere desire ...
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. return to England , for the third time , in June last , with thankfulness for the evidences I had been permitted to witness , on the part of many of the more intelligent of the Singhalese , of a sincere desire ...
Page xvii
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. made many suppose that some celestial personage had visited their land . The food he received was different in kind from that to which he had been accustomed in the palace ; but he retired to the shade of a ...
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. made many suppose that some celestial personage had visited their land . The food he received was different in kind from that to which he had been accustomed in the palace ; but he retired to the shade of a ...
Page xviii
... Buddha , " wiser than the wisest , and higher than the highest . " As he was twenty - nine years of age when he left ... Buddhas , but had long been entirely forgotten . Gótama now received them by intuition , and he proclaimed them once ...
... Buddha , " wiser than the wisest , and higher than the highest . " As he was twenty - nine years of age when he left ... Buddhas , but had long been entirely forgotten . Gótama now received them by intuition , and he proclaimed them once ...
Page xix
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. The king of Mágadha , Bimsara , was converted to the faith of his former friend , now become Buddha . His two principal disciples were Seriyut and Mugalan . The first was convinced of the truth of the Dharmma ...
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. The king of Mágadha , Bimsara , was converted to the faith of his former friend , now become Buddha . His two principal disciples were Seriyut and Mugalan . The first was convinced of the truth of the Dharmma ...
Page xxiii
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. Ganges and the borders of Nepal , though we may have no proof of this beyond the traditions of its adherents . The reign of Asóka is the starting point of Buddhist chronologists ; and we know from other ...
... Buddha Robert Spence Hardy. Ganges and the borders of Nepal , though we may have no proof of this beyond the traditions of its adherents . The reign of Asóka is the starting point of Buddhist chronologists ; and we know from other ...
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The Legends and Theories of the Buddhists: Compared With History and Science ... Robert Spence Hardy No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
ancient Anguttara Nikaya appear Aryan authority become birth body brahma-loka Brahmans British Museum Buddha Buddhist called caste cause Ceylon character Christianity cloth Commentaries continent death déwas Dharmma divine doctrines earth edition evidence evil existence extended former Gótama Hindu hymns India island Jambudípa kalpas khandas king Kshatriya language legends lived Maha Méru Mahindo Mátanga Max Müller miles high mind mountain native never Nikaya nirwána Note original Pali period Pingala Pitakas possessed Post 8vo precepts present priest priesthood principles produced race rahats Ráhu received record regarded religion Rig Veda rishis rivers Royal Royal Asiatic Society sacred books sage Sakwala rock Sákya Sanskrit Sára Sangaha seen Sekra Singhalese soul Sramana statements supposed Suttanta Syriac Tathágato teachings tell Text things thought thousand tion told translated tree truth Uttarakuru Vedas Vedic Wannaná whilst whole words yójanas
Popular passages
Page 39 - Before all temples the upright heart and pure, Instruct me, for thou know'st; thou from the first Wast present, and, with mighty wings outspread, Dove-like, sat'st brooding on the vast abyss, And mad'st it pregnant: what in me is dark Illumine; what is low, raise and support...
Page 67 - The profoundly wise priests had heretofore orally perpetuated the Pali Pitakattaya and its ArthakathS (commentaries). At this period these priests, foreseeing the perdition of the people (from the perversions of the true doctrines) assembled ; and in order that the religion might endure for ages, recorded the same in...
Page 11 - Brahmin eats but his own food ; wears but his own apparel ; and bestows but his own in alms : through the benevolence of the Brahmin, indeed, other mortals enjoy life.
Page 229 - And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ ; and he shall reign for ever and ever
Page 245 - Ancient Syriac Documents Relative to the Earliest Establishment of Christianity in Edessa and the neighbouring Countries, from the year after our Lord's Ascension to the beginning of the Fourth Century. Discovered, edited, translated, and annotated by W. CURETON, DD, Canon of Westminster.
Page 68 - Preparing for this, and studying the same, translate them according to the rules of the grammar of the Magadhas. It will be an act conducive to the welfare of the whole world.
Page 72 - Buddha, has no place in the geography of the Hindus, suggests that it may be rendered, the substance of Kapila ; intimating, in fact, the Sankhya philosophy, the doctrine of Kapila Muni, upon which the fundamental elements of Buddhism, the eternity of matter, the principles of things, and the final extinction, are supposed to be planned. < It seems not impossible...
Page 69 - Taking up his residence in the secluded Ganthakara vihara, at Anuradhapura, he translated, according to the grammatical rules of the Magadhas, which is the root of all languages, the whole of the Singhalese Atthakatha (into Pali).
Page 147 - Galle, the surface soil rests on a stratum of decomposing coral ; and sea shells are found at a considerable distance from the shore. Further north, at Madampe, between Chilaw and Negombo, the shells of pearl oysters and other bivalves are turned up by the plough more than ten miles from the sea.