SUPPLEMENT TO VOLUME 8
TRANSLATIONS
Sayings
from
the Mahabharata
Death is to me less fearful than the Untruth. Doubt is the source of all mischief; all work undertaken without any hesitation or doubt is crowned with success.
If a man kill another by whom he has been deceived and goes
to hell for his sin, even hell is to him as welcome as heaven.
Gather wisdom from the ravings of the insane and the babble of
children even as gold is gathered from rocky ore. He who is aware of his own faults and is ashamed of them is qualified to be the teacher of the world.
As age deprives woman of her beauty so the absence of
humility deprives man of his attractiveness. Page-143 If one man were to possess all the grain, all the gold, all the cattle and all the women in the world yet he would not be content.
The wise mourn neither the living nor the dead.
Each separate burning brand emits smoke, but when put together they burst into a blaze.
Anger towards children, the old, and the suffering should be
controlled. If one who is the lord of wealth happen to be the stave of his senses he and his wealth soon part company.
Jealousy is the strength of the wicked, punishment of evil-doers is the strength of kings, ministration to suffering is the strength of
women, and forgiveness is the strength of the wise.
When the wealth, beauty, heroism, birth, happiness, good fortune, and
hospitality of one man excite the envy of another the pain and trouble of the
envious man are endless.
The seeker after pleasure must abandon knowledge and the
seeker after knowledge must abandon pleasure.
What can be more wonderful than the fact that in spite of
deaths happening every day before their eyes the survivors think that for them
there is no death!
Bande Mataram, September 1, 1906
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