of all pains; and of love, and hate, the
causes of pain; and ignorance which is the cause of love and hate.
1152 One who is bliss; or the mover.
1153 One who destroys ignorance and its effects.
1154 The doer of all actions.
1155 One who beholds the universe; who is a witness of good and bad
actions.
1156 Sacrifice of the five sensual fires.
1157 According to Apastamba (says the commentator) "it should have been
placed on the nose: this must therefore have been done in conformity
with some other Sutras."
1158 A class of eight gods.
1159 A class of eleven gods called Rudras.
1160 Named Viryavan.
1161 A class of divine devotees named Sadhyas.
1162 One who resides in the water.
1163 The third incarnation of Vishnu, that bore the earth on his tusk.
1164 One whose armies are everywhere.
1165 One who controls the senses.
1166 He who resides in the heart, or who is full, or all-pervading.
1167 Vamana, or the Dwarf incarnation of Vishnu.
1168 The killer of Madhu, a demon.
1169 He from whose navel, the lotus, from which Brahma was born, springs.
1170 He who has a thousand horns. The horns are here the Sakhas of the
Sama-veda.
1171 One who has a hundred heads. The heads are here meant to devote a
hundred commandments of the Vedas.
1172 Siddhas are those who have already gained the summit of their
desires.
1173 Sadhyas are those that are still trying to gain the summit.
1174 A mystic syllable uttered in Mantras.
1175 A mystic syllable made of the letters which respectively denote
Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva.
1176 A class of divine gods.
1177 Sanskaras are those sacred writings through which the divine
commands and prohibitions are known.
1178 Bali, a demon whom Vamana confined in Patala.
1179 Vishnu, the second of the Hindu triad.
1180 Krishna, (black coloured) one of the ten incarnations of Vishnu.
1181 A. Weber, _Akademische Vorlesungen_, p. 181.
1182 Systema brahmanicum, liturgicum, mythologicum, civile, exmonumentis
Indicis, etc.
1183 Not only have the races of India translated or epitomized it, but
foreign nations have appropriated it wholly or in part, Persia,
Java, and Japan itself.
1184 In the third century B.C.
***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RAMAYANA***
CREDITS
March 18, 2008
Project Gutenberg TEI edi
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