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Showing posts from June, 2018

Teaching of buddha

Vyasana (Byasana) Sutta - Disaster, misfortune, misery, ruin, destruction, loss, Addictedness, A bad habit;  or misfortune concerning one’s relations, wealth, health, character, views. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [1] 'Monks, if any monk abuses and reviles, rails at the Ariyans who are his fellows in the Brahma-life, it is utterly impossible, it is unavoidable that he should not come to one or other of eleven disasters. What eleven? [202] He fails to attain the unattained; from what he has attained he falls away; true dhamma is not made clear for him; or else he is conceited about true dhammas, or he follows the Brahma life without delight therein, or commits some foul offence, [318] or gives up the trainiug and falls back to the low life;[2] or he falls into some grievous sickness, or goes out of his mind with distraction; he makes an end with mind confused and when body breaks up

Teachings of Buddha

FUNDAMENTAL BUDDHISTIC BELIEFS 1) Buddhist are taught to show the same tolerance, forbearance, and brotherly love to all men, without distinction; and an unswerving kindness towards the members of the animal kingdom. 2) The universe was evolved, not created; and its functions according to law, not according to the caprice of any god. 3) The truths upon which Buddhism is founded are natural. They have, we believe, been taught in succesive kalpas, or world periods, by certain illuminated beings called Buddhas, the name Buddha meaning " Enlightenment." 4) The fourth teacher in the present kalpa was Sakya Muni, or Gautama Buddha, who was born in a royal family in India about 2500 years ago. He is an historical personage and his name was Siddharta Gautama. 5) Sakya Muni taught that ignorance produces desire, unsatisfied desire is the cause of rebirth, and rebirth, the cause of sorrow. To get rid of sorrow, therefore, it is necessary to escape rebirth; to escape

Old English Period

The_Anglo_Saxon_Or_Old_English_Period_In_English_Literature_670_1100. #INTRODUCTION: The earliest phase of English literature started with Anglo-Saxon literature of the Angles and Saxons (the ancestors of the English race) much before they occupied Britain. English was the common name and tongue of these tribes. Before they occupied Britain they lived along the coasts of Sweden and Denmark, and the land which they occupied was called Engle-land. These tribes were fearless, adventurous and brave, and during the later years of Roman occupation ofBritain, they kept the British coast in terror. Like other nations they sang at their feasts about battles, gods and their ancestral heroes, and some of their chiefs were also bards. It was in these songs of religion, wars and agriculture, that English poetry began in the ancient Engle-land while Britain was still a Roman province. #POETRY: Though much of this Anglo-Saxon poetry is lost, there are still some fragments left. For example, W