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  1. Like the Ramayana and the Bhagavad-Gita, the kavya masterpieces emphasize the importance of dharma, or religious duty (see pages 890–953,1010–1028 in volume A).
  2. The Pañcatantra is the source of well-known tale collections, including The Thousand and One Nights (see pages 1566–1618 in volume B), The Decameron (see pages 1963–1991 in volume B) and The Canterbury Tales (see pages 2045–2119 in volume B).
  3. Like the Buddhist Jataka tales, each tale in the Pañcatantra opens with a narrator reciting an epigrammatic verse that arouses the listener's curiosity by summarizing the moral of the story and the subject matter (see pages 1002–1010 in volume A).
  4. The satirical portrayal of corrupt holy men in the Kathasaritsagara might be early precursors to the satirization of monks and nuns in The Canterbury Tales (see pages 2045–2119 in volume B).
 
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