India: What can it teach us? / A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University Of Cambridge - F. Max Müller - Page №127
India: What can it teach us? / A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University Of Cambridge
F. Max Müller
Страница - 126Страница - 128
  • K.
  • Kâlidâsa, the poet, his age, [110];
    • plays of, [111].
  • Kamal-eddin Abd-errazak, on the Hindus, [75].
  • Kausika, punished for truthfulness, [89].
  • Kanishka, the Saka king, [106].
  • Kanjur, the women and the child in the, [29].
  • Kâthaka, or reader, [158].
  • Kathenotheism, [166].
  • Keshub Chunder Sen, his grandfather, [59].
  • Kînas, or Chinese, [151].
  • Koran, oaths on, [70].
  • Krumu, [185].
  • Kshatriyas, [232].
  • Ktesias, on the justice of the Indians, [72].
  • Ktisis, [223].
  • Kubhâ, [185].
  • Kullavagga, quotation from the, [96].
  • Kuenen, Professor, on worship of Yahweh, [272].
  • L.
  • Ladak, [192].
  • Lakshmana, [86].
  • Lares familiares in Rome, [240].
  • Lassen, [151].
  • Law books of India, [30].
  • Life, Indian and European views of, [121];
    • beautiful sentiments of, from Hindu writings, [124];
    • a journey, [120].
  • Law of Nature, [263].
  • Laws of Manu, [111].
  • Liberal, The, Keshub Chunder Sen's organ, [99].
  • Liberal education, the elements of, [38].
  • Lightning, son of Parganya, [205].
  • Literature, written, [224].
  • Lituania, [209];
    • its language, [209];
    • its god of rain, [210];
    • prayer to the same, [211].
  • Logographi, [223].
  • Lost Tribes, The, of Israel, [159].
  • Ludlow on village schools in India, [80].
  • Ludwig, translation of Sanskrit words, [187].
  • Lunar stations, [150].
  • Lunar zodiac, [147].
  • M.
  • Mahâbhârata, an epic poem, speaks for the truth, [88];
    • yet recited, [99].
  • Mahmud of Gazni, [72].
  • Maine, Sir Henry, [65].
  • Malcolm, Sir John, on the Hindus, [55].
  • Manâ, A golden, [146].
  • Mânavas, The laws of, on evil-doers, [93].
  • Mangaia, [170].
  • Manning, Judge, [173].
  • Manu, his code of laws, [30];
    • their true age, [111];
    • his connection with the deluge, [155].
  • Manuscripts, the first collectors of, [224].
  • Mâori Genesis, [173].
  • Maruts, the storm-gods, [199].
  • Mâui, son of Ru, [171];
    • legend of, [171];
    • its origin, [173].
  • Megasthenes on village life, [65];
    • on Hindu honesty, [72].
  • Melanippê, [177].
  • Memory, power of, [232].
  • Metamorphic changes in religions, [128].
  • Mill, History of India, [59];
    • estimate of Hindu character, [60].
  • Mina, its weight, [125].
  • Mitra, [156];
    • invoked, [215].
  • Modern Sanskrit literature, [107].
  • Mohammedans, their opinion of the Hindus, [75];
    • the number of sects, [76];
    • treatment of Hindus, [90].
  • Monotheism in the Veda, [164].
  • Morality, our, Saxon, [38].
  • Moral depravity in India, [93].
  • Munro, Thomas, Sir, opinion of Hindus, [61].
  • Müller, Max, his teachers, [45];
    • intercourse with Hindus, [81];
    • opinion of their character, [82].
  • N.
  • Nakshatras, The twenty-seven, [148].
  • Naktâ and Nyx, [201].
  • Nala, [110].
  • Native scholars, [81].
  • Nearchus, [225].
  • New and Full-Moon Sacrifices, [252].
  • New Testament, Revised Edition, [141].
  • Newspapers, Sanskrit, [98].
  • Nine gems or classics, [115].
  • Northern conquerors, [106].
  • Numerals in Sanskrit, [46].
  • O.
  • Oath, Taking an, in village communities, [68];
    • its understanding by the Hindus, [69];
    • fear of punishment connected with, [70].
  • Old Testament, [140].
  • Ophir, [28].
  • Orange River, [188].
  • Oriental scholars, names and work hardly known, [22].
  • Orissa, [96].
  • Orme, [60].
  • Orpheus and Ribhu, [201].
  • Ôs, ôris, [44].
  • Oude, [189].
  • Ouranos, [213].
  • P.
  • Pahlavi, translation of the Pañkatantra into, [115].
  • Palestine, [33].
  • Pâli dialect, [107].
  • Pandits, [57];
    • Professor Wilson on the, [58].
  • Panini, [230].
  • Pañkatantra, [114].
  • Papyros, [224].
  • Parganya, [202];
    • hymn to, [205];
    • derivation of name, [207].
  • Pârvana Srâddha, [260].
  • Periegesis, [223].
  • Periodos, [223].
  • Periplus, or circumnavigations, [222].
  • Perjury, common in India, [71].
  • Pérkons, thunder, [210].
  • Perkuna, [212].
  • Perkunas, Lituanian god of thunder, [210].
  • Perkuno, [212].
  • Persians, what we owe to, [36].
  • Petersburgh Dictionary, [183].
  • Phœnicians, what we owe to, [36];
    • their letters, [222].
  • Pinda-pitriyagña, [251].
  • Pipal tree, [50].
  • Pitris, the fathers, [239];
    • invoked, [241].
  • Pitriyagña-sacrifices, [248].
  • Plato, [142].
  • Pliny, Indian rivers known to, [191].
  • Political communities, [31].
  • Polytheism, the kind of, in the Veda, [165].
  • Positivist sentiments of a Brâhman, [87].
  • Primitive man, [133].
  • Prayers for rain, [205];
    • for the dead, [262].
  • Prometheus and Pramantha, [195].
  • Proto-aryan language, [43].
  • Ptolemy, [36].
  • Pumice-stone, [171].
  • Punjab, the, rivers of the, [183].
  • Purânas, [162].
  • R.
  • Raghu, [86].
  • Rajendralâl Mitra, on sacrifices, [251].
  • Râma, on truth, [87].
  • Râma Bâvâ, the anchorite, [271].
  • Râmâyana, the plot of, [86];
    • yet recited, [99].
  • Rawlinson, Sir Henry, [158].
  • Readers not numerous in ancient or modern times, [141].
  • Recitation of the old epics in India, [99].
  • Religion, its home in India, [31];
    • our debt to Oriental religions, [36];
    • its transcendent character, [126];
    • metamorphic changes in, [128];
    • began in trust, not in fear, [197].
  • Rémusat on the Goths, [104].
  • Renaissance period in India, [110].
  • Revival of religion in India, [270].
  • Ribhu and Orpheus, [201].
  • Rig-Veda, editions of, now publishing, [98];
    • known by heart, [99];
    • a treasure to the anthropologist, [134];
    • character of its poems, [143];
    • its religion primitive, [144];
    • compliment to the author for his edition of, [163];
    • the number of hymns in, [163];
    • age of the oldest manuscripts, [221];
    • total number of words in, [228];
    • how transmitted, [231].
  • Ringold, Duke of Lituania, [209].
  • Rishis, The Vedic, [168];
    • question of earth's origin, [180];
    • their intoxicating beverage, [243].
  • Rita, the third Beyond, [263].
  • Rivers, as deities, [182];
    • hymn to, [183];
    • names of, in India, [185].
  • River systems of Upper India, [188].
  • Robertson's Historical Disquisitions, [60].
  • Ru, the sky-supporter, [170];
    • his bones, [171];
    • why pumice-stone, [173].
  • Rückert's Weisheit der Brahmanen, [22].
  • Rudra, the howler, [199].
  • S.
  • S, pronounced as h, in Iranic languages, [189].
  • Sacrifices, priestly, [148];
    • daily and monthly, [248].
  • Sakas, invasion of the, [104].
  • Sakuntalâ, her appeal to conscience, [90].
  • Sanskrit language, its study differently appreciated, [21];
    • use of studying, [23];
    • its supreme importance, [39];
    • its antiquity, [40];
    • its family relations, [40];
    • its study ridiculed, [45];
    • its linguistic influence, [46];
    • its moral influence, [47];
    • a dead language, [96];
    • early dialects of, [96];
    • still influential, [97];
    • scholars' use of, [98];
    • journals in, [96];
    • all living languages in India draw their life from, [100].
  • Sanskrit literature, human interest of, [95];
    • the literature of India, [99];
    • manuscripts existing, [102];
    • divisions of, [104];
    • character of the ancient and the modern, [107];
    • known in Persia, [113];
    • a new start in, [115];
    • its study very profitable, [275].
  • Satapatha Brâhmana, [91].
  • Schopenhauer, on the Upanishads, [273].
  • Seasons, how regulated, [148].
  • Self-knowledge, the highest goal of the Veda, [125].
  • Sindhu, the Indus river, [183];
    • address to, [184];
    • meaning of, [189].
  • Sleeman, Colonel, his rambles and recollections, [60];
    • his life in village communities, [63];
    • his opinion of Hindus, [67].
  • Solar myths, [216].
  • Solomon's judgment compared, [29].
  • Spencer, Herbert, on ancestor worship, [239];
    • his misstatement corrected, [240].
  • Srâddhas, or Love Feasts, [248];
    • to the departed, [254];
    • their source, [257];
    • their number, [258];
    • striking resemblance, [261].
  • Sudâs, [200].
  • Sun, the central thought in Aryan mythology, [216].
  • Sûrya, god of the sun, [168].
  • T.
  • Tamil, [95].
  • Tane-Mahuta, forest-god, [174].
  • Târâs, the stars, [151].
  • Terrestrial gods, [169].
  • Teutonic mythology, [166].
  • Theogony, [235].
  • Thôrr, [166].
  • Three beyonds, [220].
  • Thsin dynasty, [152].
  • Thugs, [63].
  • Tortoise, the story of the, [154].
  • Towers of Silence, [22].
  • Towns, names of, in India, [189].
  • Troy, siege of, [172].
  • Truth, root meaning in Sanskrit, [82].
  • Truthfulness, a luxury, [91].
  • Turanian invasion, [104].
  • Two women and child, story of, [29].
  • Tŷr and Tin, [213].
  • U.
  • Ugvis, Lithuanian, [41].
  • Universities, the object of their teaching, [19].
  • Untruthfulness of the Hindus, [53].
  • Upanishads, [267];
    • their beauty, [273].
  • Uranos and Varuna, [201].
  • Urvasi, [110].
  • Ushas and Eos, [202].
  • Uttarapaksha, [136].