| Sir Edwin Arnold - Buddhism - 1879 - 264 pages
...immortal flowers Carpeting all the way with joy ! there throng Swiftest and sweetest hours ! More i* the treasure of the Law than gems ; Sweeter than comb its sweetness ; ito delight? Delightful past compare. Thereby to live Hear the fine Bales aright : — Kfll not —... | |
| Choice literature - 1880 - 1170 pages
...bloom th' immortal flu-mrre Carpeting all the way with joy ! there throng Swiftest and sweetest hours ! More is the treasure of the law than gems ; Sweeter than comb its sweetness ; Us delight» Delightful past compare. Thereby to live Hear the ßve rules aright : Kill not — for... | |
| 1881 - 780 pages
...of Asia, a book which any one but a Buddhist can hardly have composed save as a translation) : — " Kill not, for Pity's sake, and lest ye slay The meanest thing upon its upward way." (In speaking of the virtues of Buddhism, we must not forget the noble stand which Buddha made against... | |
| New Church gen. confer - 1882 - 632 pages
...Woom th' immortal flowers Carpeting all the way with joy ! there throng Swiftest and sweetest hours. More is the treasure of the law than gems ; Sweeter...delights Delightful past compare. Thereby to live Htar the Five Rules aright : — Kill not — for Pity's sake — and lest ye slay The meanest thing... | |
| Masonic monthly - 1882 - 398 pages
...and a more careful study now call for their consideration and purview. TO AN INTRUSIVE BUTTERFLY. " Kill not— for Pity's sake — and lest ye slay The meanest thing upon its upward way." — Five Rules of Buddha. I" WATCH you through the garden walks, -*- I watch you float between The... | |
| Sir Edwin Arnold - 1885 - 318 pages
...bloom th' immortal flowers Carpeting all the way with joy ! there throng Swiftest and sweetest hours ! More is the treasure of the Law than gems ; Sweeter...Delightful past compare. Thereby to live Hear the Five Rides aright : — Kill not — for Pity's sake — and lest ye slay The meanest thing upon its upward... | |
| Questions and answers - 1885 - 580 pages
...lust, love of life on earth, desire for heaven, self-praise, error, and pride. The five right rules — Kill not — for pity's sake— and lest ye slay The meanest thing upon It's upward way. Give freely and receive— but take from none By greed, or force, or fraud, what is... | |
| Sir Edwin Arnold - Buddha (The concept). - 1887 - 288 pages
...bloom tli" immortal flowers Carpeting all the way with joy ! there throng Swiftest and sweetest hours ! More is the treasure of the Law than gems ; Sweeter...delights Delightful past compare. Thereby to live Hear die Five Rules aright : — Kill not — for Pity's sake — and lest ye sky The meanest thing upon... | |
| Austin Dobson - 1889 - 318 pages
...— " With Care," — To a Fine-Art Museum — that old Sedan chair ! TO AN INTRUSIVE BUTTERFLY. " Kill not— for Pity's sake— and lest ye slay The meanest thing upon its up-.oard way." FIVE RULES OF BUDDHA. I WATCH you through the garden walks, I watch you float between... | |
| Frederick L. Dibble - 1893 - 476 pages
...religiously believed, partook with him of a common origin, and were to share with him a common destiny. " Kill not— for Pity's sake — and lest ye slay The meanest thing upon its upward way." The timid Chinese shrank from the destruction of life ; yet he did not hesitate to eat the flesh of... | |
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