FOOTNOTES
[Footnote 1]: Jesus.
[Footnote 2]: Grandfather.
[Footnote 3]: Marjoram.
[Footnote 4]: Tent pitchers, men employed in measuring land.
[Footnote 5]: Om mi pudmi houm. The Buddhist invocation.
[Footnote 6]: Shiva.
[Footnote 7]: Mata devi.
[Footnote 8]: Vishnu Lukshmi.
[Footnote 9]: Holi, the Indian Saturnalia.
[Footnote 10]: Kristna.
[Footnote 11]: Hari.
[Footnote 12]: Kaniya.
[Footnote 13]: Gopi-nath. These are all names of Vishnu in his various Avatars.
[Footnote 14]: Encore.
[Footnote 15]: A fossil ammonite.
[Footnote 16]: Goddess.
[Footnote 17]: Victory to Mother Kâli!
[Footnote 18]: The first Aryan settlements were in the Punjab.
[Footnote 19]: A widow brings ill-luck with her.
[Footnote 20]: Ram anund. Ram, God; anund, happiness.
[Footnote 21]: The dirge in honour of the martyred Hussan and Hussain.
[Footnote 22]: A model of the martyrs' shrine; a permanent erection, whereas the tâzzias used for the procession are afterwards burned. There is a celebrated Imâm-bârah at Lucknow, imported from England.
[Footnote 23]: A pet name for mother or nurse.
[Footnote 24]: The Great God.
[Footnote 25]: A reduction in the number of guns is the first punishment for bad administration.
[Footnote 26]: Pagul = mad.
[Footnote 27]: Blue-throated; the name of the kingfisher.
[Footnote 28]: The Ganges.
[Footnote 29]: Worship.
[Footnote 30]: Copyright, 1895, by Macmillan & Co.
[Footnote 31]: Equivalent to our Easter.
[Footnote 32]: Bad living.
[Footnote 33]: Greeting or peace to the King.
[Footnote 34]: Honorific title for a father.
[Footnote 35]: A common belief in India.
[Footnote 36]: The Universal God.
[Footnote 37]: The barber is always employed in regular betrothals.
[Footnote 38]: Judge.
[Footnote 39]: The Universal God.]
[Footnote 40]: The Monkey-god.
[Footnote 41]: Head-man of village.
[Footnote 42]: From chujj, a sweeper's basket. One of the many opprobrious names given to avert the envious, and therefore evil, eye.
[Footnote 43]: For the most part, sugar animals, such as are sold at English fairs.
[Footnote 44]: Echis carinata, the Indian viper. It lies coiled in a true-lover's knot, rustling its scales one against the other. It is the most vicious and irritable of all Indian snakes.
[Footnote 45]: A husband's name should never be mentioned by a wife, especially in matters referring to herself.
[Footnote 46]: Worldly-wealth.
[Footnote 47]: Take her hand.
[Footnote 48]: Explain.
[Footnote 49]: Watchman.
[Footnote 50]: Copyright, 1896, by Macmillan & Co.
[Footnote 51]: Aga, noble; Meean, prince.
[Footnote 52]: Copyright, 1895, by Macmillan & Co.
[Footnote 53]: Copyright, 1896, by Macmillan & Co.