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Art. II.—The Páramitá-hridaya Sútra, or, in Chinese, “;Mo-ho-pô-ye-po-lo-mih-to-sin-king,” i.e., “The Great Páramitá Heart Sútra.”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

This Sútra consists of about two hundred and fifty characters. It is repeated in the course of the daily worship of the Buddhists, by rote, as a mantra would be repeated (according to Colebrooke, pp. 8, 9, Relig. of Hindoos,) by the Hindoos. In its composition it resembles, or appears to resemble, the sacred writings of the Brahmans. No author's name is attached to it. It does not even begin with the usual preface “thus have I heard” (evam mayá śrutam). But we have mentioned in it the Rishi to whom it was communicated, and the Devatá from whom it proceeded. In this particular, at any rate, it strongly resembles the Vedic model. And when we recollect that the later Buddhists attempted in every possible way to absorb the system of the Brahmans in their own, yielding so far as they dared to popular superstitions, we shall not wonder in finding so many similarities, in externals at least, between the two religions.

Type
Original Communications
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1864

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