Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: August 29, 2024
Garcin de Tassy, Histoire de la Littérature Hindoue, II. pp. 120-134. He regards Mâyâ as something evil, a trick, a thief, a force which leads men captive, but which disappears with the knowledge of God. Macauliffe, VI. pp. 186 and 188. Even in the hymns of the Âdi Granth we find such phrases as "Now thou and I have become one."
I have just read also, la Chretienne by the Abbe Bautain. A curious book for a novelist. It smacks of its period of modern Paris. I gulped a volume by Garcin de Tassy on Hindustani literature, to get clean. One can breathe, at least, in that. You see that your Father Cruchard is not entirely stupefied by the theatre. However, I haven't anything to complain of in the Vaudeville.
The letter begins with a reference to M. Garcin de Tassy and his "annual oration," and continues with some passages of great interest concerning the Rubaiyat and Attar's "Birds." "I have come here to wind up accounts for our Herring-lugger: much against us as the season has been a bad one.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking