cover image: The Aryan Path  November 1952

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The Aryan Path November 1952

1950

It is a union par excellence in which apart from the ordinary meaning of the words and sentences of a literary piece there is a suggestion of a noble emotion or idea which enhances the beauty of the composition and creates a profound xsthetic joy in the heart of the hearer or the reader. [...] The poet suggests that the beauty of the voice is not merely the sweetness of the sound but is also the outward expression of the beauty of the soul. [...] This poetic fancy of the onness of man with Nature is sustained by the conviction of the Sanskrit poets of the truth of the one Spirit which pervades all creation and exists as much in the objects of Nature as in the human mind. [...] The Sanskrit writers see the power of God in the awful silence of the mountain peaks in the wonderful glow of the dawn and in the glorous colours of the sunset. [...] Even less could they free themselves from the spell of the magnetic pesonality of Jesus of the tragedy that had been the life of him who called himself the Messiah the Christ the Saviour the Son of his Father.
philosophy religion
Pages
57
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120051
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-ii unknown view
“Thus Have I Heard”—
485-486 Shravaka view
Unity and Harmony in Sanskrit Literature
487-491 K. Aiyar view
One World Government
491-491 unknown view
The Christian Tradition and The Message of Jesus
492-498 Hermann Goetz view
Bernard Leach Britain’s Master Potter
499-503 unknown view
The Laws of Culture
504-508 P. Rao view
Bon—the Pre-Buddhist Religion of Tibet
509-513 R.De Wojkowitz view
Thinking Together
513-513 unknown view
New Books and Old Philosophy
514-518 unknown view
Anthropology
518-522 unknown view
Reviews
523-526 unknown view
Correspondence “The Study of Languages”
527-529 unknown view
Ends and Sayings
530-532 unknown view
Backmatter
i-iv unknown view

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