Author: Aatish Taseer
Cites
- William Jones (2)
- IN: The Way Wings Were (2015) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: To what shall I compare my literary pursuits in India? Suppose Greek literature to be known in modern Greece only, and there to be in the hands of priests and philosophers; and suppose them to be still worshippers of Jupiter and Apollo; suppose Greece to have been conquered successively by Goths, Huns, Vandals, Tartars, and lastly by the English; then suppose a court of judicature to be established by the British parliament, at Athens, and an inquisitive Englishman to be one of the judges; suppose him to learn Greek there, which none of his countrymen knew, and to read Homer, Pindar, Plato, which no other Europeans had even heard of. Such am I in this country: substituiting Sanscrit for Greek, the Brahmans, for the priests of Jupiter, and Valmic, Vyasa, Calidasa, for Homer, Plato, Pindar.
FROM: Letter to Althorp, 2nd Earl Spencer, (1787), Letter, UK
- IN: The Way Things Were (2015) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: To what shall I compare my literary pursuits in India? Suppse Greek literature to be known in modern Greece only, and there to be in the hands of priest and philosophers; and suppose them to be still worshippers of Jupiter and Apollo; suppose Greece to have been conquered successively by Goths, Huns, Vandals, Tartars, and lastly by the English; then suppose a court of judicature to be established by the British parliament, at Athens, and an inquisitive Englishman to be one of the judges; suppose him to learn Greek there, which none of his countrymen knew, and to read Homer, Pindar, Plato, which no other Europeans had even heard of. Such am I in this country: substituting Sanscrit for Greek, the Brahmans, for the priests of Jupiter, and Valmic, Vyasa, Calidasa, for Homer, Plato, Pindar.
FROM: Letter to Althorp, 2nd Earl Spencer, (1787), Letter, UK
- NULL (2)
- IN: The Way Wings Were (2015) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: The god of love invented the strangest arrow in the world, one that can kill you if it strikes -- and kill you if it doesn't.
FROM: A Prakrit verse from the Srngaraprakasa of Bhoja, (1908), Poem, India
- IN: The Way Things Were (2015) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: Te god of love invented the strangest arrow in the world, one that can kill you if it strikes -- and kill you if it doesn't.
FROM: Prakrit verse from the Srngaraprakasa of Bhoja, (None), Religious Text, NULL