[4] The theory of a transverse curtain (Wilson, I. lxviii) is not supported by evidence of any clear kind. Cf. p. 113, n. 1. [↑]

[5] Weber, IS. xiv. 225. Cf. Lévi, TI. i. 374; ii. 62. [↑]

[6] The Greek number was three, later five. The Chinese stage, which resembles the Indian in its primitive character, but has no curtain, has two doors, one for entry, one for exit; Ridgeway, Dramas, &c., pp. 274 f. [↑]

[7] W. Crooke, The Tribes and Castes of the N. W. Provinces and Oudh, ii. 20 ff. [↑]

[8] Hillebrandt, AID., p. 12; cf. naṭagrāma, Epigr. Ind. i. 381. [↑]

[9] xxiv. 85 f. [↑]

[10] Cf. Karpūramañjarī, i. 12/13. [↑]

[11] xxvi.; cf. xii. 166 f. [↑]

[12] Weber, IS. xiii. 493. [↑]

[13] viii. 362; cf. Rāmāyaṇa, ii. 30. 8; Kuṭṭanīmata, 855. [↑]