147 (return)
[ The priestly caste
sprang, as has been said, from the noblest part of the Demiurgus; the
three others from lower members.]
148 (return)
[ A chew of betel leaf
and spices is offered by the master of the house when dismissing a
visitor.]
149 (return)
[ Respectable Hindus say
that receiving a fee for a daughter is like selling flesh.]
150 (return)
[ A modern custom amongst
the low caste is for the bride and bridegroom, in the presence of friends,
to place a flower garland on each other’s necks, and thus declare
themselves man and wife. The old classical Gandharva-lagan has been before
explained.]
151 (return)
[ Meaning that the sight
of each other will cause a smile, and that what one purposes the other
will consent to.]
152 (return)
[ This would be the
verdict of a Hindu jury.]
153 (return)
[ Because stained with
the powder of Mhendi, or the Lawsonia inermis shrub.]
154 (return)
[ Kansa’s son: so called
because the god Shiva, when struck by his shafts, destroyed him with a
fiery glance.]
155 (return)
[ “Great Brahman”; used
contemptuously to priests who officiate for servile men. Brahmans lose
their honour by the following things: By becoming servants to the king; by
pursuing any secular business; by acting priests to Shudras (serviles); by
officiating as priests for a whole village; and by neglecting any part of
the three daily services. Many violate these rules; yet to kill a Brahman
is still one of the five great Hindu sins. In the present age of the
world, the Brahman may not accept a gift of cows or of gold; of course he
despises the law. As regards monkey worship, a certain Rajah of Nadiya is
said to have expended 10,000L in marrying two monkeys with all the parade
and splendour of the Hindu rite.]
156 (return)
[ The celebrated Gayatri,
the Moslem Kalmah.]
157 (return)
[ Kama again.]
158 (return)
[ From “Man,” to think;
primarily meaning, what makes man think.]
159 (return)
[ The Cirrhadae of
classical writers.]
160 (return)
[ The Hindu Pluto; also
called the Just King.]
161 (return)
[ Yama judges the dead,
whose souls go to him in four hours and forty minutes; therefore a corpse
cannot be burned till after that time. His residence is Yamalaya, and it
is on the south side of the earth; down South, as we say. (I, Sam. xxv. 1,
and xxx. 15). The Hebrews, like the Hindus, held the northern parts of the
world to be higher than the southern. Hindus often joke a man who is seen
walking in that direction, and ask him where he is going.]
162 (return)
[ The “Ganges,” in heaven
called Mandakini. I have no idea why we still adhere to our venerable
corruption of the word.]
163 (return)
[ The fabulous mountain
supposed by Hindu geographers to occupy the centre of the universe.]
164 (return)
[ The all-bestowing tree
in Indra’s Paradise which grants everything asked of it. It is the Tuba of
Al-Islam and is not unknown to the Apocryphal New Testament.]
165 (return)
[ “Vikramaditya, Lord of
the Saka.” This is prevoyance on the part of the Vampire; the king had not
acquired the title.]
166 (return)
[ On the sixth day after
the child’s birth, the god Vidhata writes all its fate upon its forehead.
The Moslems have a similar idea, and probably it passed to the Hindus.]
167 (return)
[ Goddess of eloquence.
“The waters of the Saraswati” is the classical Hindu phrase for the
mirage.]
168 (return)
[ This story is perhaps
the least interesting in the collection. I have translated it literally,
in order to give an idea of the original. The reader will remark in it the
source of our own nursery tale about the princess who was so high born and
delicately bred, that she could discover the three peas laid beneath a
straw mattress and four feather beds. The Hindus, however, believe that
Sybaritism can be carried so far; I remember my Pandit asserting the truth
of the story.]
169 (return)
[ A minister. The word,
as is the case with many in this collection, is quite modern Moslem, and
anachronistic.]
170 (return)
[ The cow is called the
mother of the gods, and is declared by Brahma, the first person of the
triad, Vishnu and Shiva being the second and the third, to be a proper
object of worship. “If a European speak to the Hindu about eating the
flesh of cows,” says an old missionary, “they immediately raise their
hands to their ears; yet milkmen, carmen, and farmers beat the cow as
unmercifully as a carrier of coals beats his ass in England.” The Jains or
Jainas (from ji, to conquer; as subduing the passions) are one of the
atheistical sects with whom the Brahmans have of old carried on the
fiercest religious controversies, ending in many a sanguinary fight. Their
tenets are consequently exaggerated and ridiculed, as in the text. They
believe that there is no such God as the common notions on the subject
point out, and they hold that the highest act of virtue is to abstain from
injuring sentient creatures. Man does not possess an immortal spirit:
death is the same to Brahma and to a fly. Therefore there is no heaven or
hell separate from present pleasure or pain. Hindu Epicureans!—“Epicuri
de grege porci.”]
171 (return)
[ Narak is one of the
multitudinous places of Hindu punishment, said to adjoin the residence of
Ajarna. The less cultivated Jains believe in a region of torment. The
illuminati, however, have a sovereign contempt for the Creator, for a
future state, and for all religious ceremonies. As Hindus, however, they
believe in future births of mankind, somewhat influenced by present
actions. The “next birth” in the mouth of a Hindu, we are told, is the
same as “to-morrow” in the mouth of a Christian. The metempsychosis is on
an extensive scale: according to some, a person who loses human birth must
pass through eight millions of successive incarnations—fish,
insects, worms, birds, and beasts—before he can reappear as a man.]
172 (return)
[ Jogi, or Yogi, properly
applies to followers of the Yoga or Patanjala school, who by ascetic
practices acquire power over the elements. Vulgarly, it is a general term
for mountebank vagrants, worshippers of Shiva. The Janganis adore the same
deity, and carry about a Linga. The Sevras are Jain beggars, who regard
their chiefs as superior to the gods of other sects. The Sannyasis are
mendicant followers of Shiva; they never touch metals or fire, and, in
religious parlance, they take up the staff They are opposed to the
Viragis, worshippers of Vishnu, who contend as strongly against the
worshippers of gods who receive bloody offerings, as a Christian could do
against idolatry.]
173 (return)
[ The Brahman, or priest,
is supposed to proceed from the mouth of Brahma, the creating person of
the Triad; the Khshatriyas (soldiers) from his arms; the Vaishyas
(enterers into business) from his thighs; and the Shudras, “who take
refuge in the Brahmans,” from his feet. Only high caste men should assume
the thread at the age of puberty.]
174 (return)
[ Soma, the moon, I have
said, is masculine in India.]
175 (return)
[ Pluto.]
176 (return)
[ Nothing astonishes
Hindus so much as the apparent want of affection between the European
parent and child.]
177 (return)
[ A third marriage is
held improper and baneful to a Hindu woman. Hence, before the nuptials
they betroth the man to a tree, upon which the evil expends itself, and
the tree dies.]
178 (return)
[ Kama]
179 (return)
[ An oath, meaning, “From
such a falsehood preserve me, Ganges!”]
180 (return)
[ The Indian Neptune.]
181 (return)
[ A highly insulting form
of adjuration.]
182 (return)
[ The British Islands—according
to Wilford.]
183 (return)
[ Literally the science
(veda) of the bow (dhanush). This weapon, as everything amongst the
Hindus, had a divine origin: it was of three kinds—the common bow,
the pellet or stone bow, and the crossbow or catapult.]
184 (return)
[ It is a disputed point
whether the ancient Hindus did or did not know the use of gunpowder.]
185 (return)
[ It is said to have
discharged balls, each 6,400 pounds in weight.]
186 (return)
[ A kind of Mercury, a
god with the head and wings of a bird, who is the Vahan or vehicle of the
second person of the Triad, Vishnu.]
187 (return)
[ The celebrated burning
springs of Baku, near the Caspian, are so called. There are many other
“fire mouths.”]
188 (return)
[ The Hindu Styx.]
189 (return)
[ From Yaksha, to eat; as
Rakshasas are from Raksha, to preserve.—See Hardy’s Manual of
Buddhism, p. 57.]
190 (return)
[ Shiva is always painted
white, no one knows why. His wife Gauri has also a European complexion.
Hence it is generally said that the sect popularly called “Thugs,” who
were worshippers of these murderous gods, spared Englishmen, the latter
being supposed to have some rapport with their deities.]
191 (return)
[ The Hindu shrine is
mostly a small building, with two inner compartments, the vestibule and
the Garbagriha, or adytum, in which stands the image.]
192 (return)
[ Meaning Kali of the
cemetery (Smashana); another form of Durga.]
193 (return)
[ Not being able to find
victims, this pleasant deity, to satisfy her thirst for the curious juice,
cut her own throat that the blood might spout up into her mouth. She once
found herself dancing on her husband, and was so shocked that in surprise
she put out her tongue to a great length, and remained motionless. She is
often represented in this form.]
194 (return)
[ This ashtanga, the most
ceremonious of the five forms of Hindu salutation, consists of prostrating
and of making the eight parts of the body—namely, the temples, nose
and chin, knees and hands—touch the ground.]
195 (return)
[ “Sidhis,” the
personified Powers of Nature. At least, so we explain them: but people do
not worship abstract powers.]
196 (return)
[ The residence of Indra,
king of heaven, built by Wishwa-Karma, the architect of the gods.]
197 (return)
[ In other words, to the
present day, whenever a Hindu novelist, romancer, or tale writer seeks a
peg upon which to suspend the texture of his story, he invariably pitches
upon the glorious, pious, and immortal memory of that Eastern King Arthur,
Vikramaditya, shortly called Vikram.]