Book Title: Religious Problem in India
Author(s): Annie Besant
Publisher: Theosophist Office Adyar

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Page 103
________________ SIKHISM 95 If thon seekest thy own good, then do good, and let them call thee lowly. [Guru i. Āsa.] Tel 01 Weighed in the balance, he who bends down is precious. [Guru i. Suhi.] I am not good ; none else is bad. [Guru i.Suhi.] If one becomes a slave of salves, and casts ont the self, then he finds Hari. [Guru m.] As a fish cannot live without water, As a cuckoo cannot be satisfied without the raindrop, As a deer (pierced, touched or enamored) by the sound (of a gong) runs towards it, . As a black bee, thirsting for the scent of a flower, finding it, gets himself imprisoned. So the saints love God and are satisfied by seeing (Him). [Guru v. Jaitsari.] There are none who do not wrangle and oppose; Show them to me and I will praise them. [Guru i. Mārā.] The devotees and worldly men seldom agree. [Guru i. Majh.] By the Guru's favor, practise Rāja Yoga. There are few wlio annihilate duality (sense of

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