Thus she lived and died: a true child-wife, pure as a child, devoted as a wife, and always yearning for that Spirit whom she had sought for, if, haply, she might feel after Him and find Him. And surely He was not far from her, nor she from Him!
INDEX.
- Abhedânanda, [105].
- Âdi Brâhma-Samâj, [89].
- Agni, son of Dakshinâ, [205].
- — first of all the gods, [214].
- — fire, hymns to, [214], [216], [219].
- Ahanâ, Dawn, [201], [204], [206], [208].
- Ânandibâi Joshee, [116], [129];
- defends child-marriages, [116].
- — — her American Degree, [132].
- An-rita, [208].
- Arnold, Dr., and the French master, [100].
- Ârya-Samâj, [93].
- — — hold to the Veda, [94].
- Aryan mythology derived from natural phenomena, [190].
- Asoka, King, [138].
- Asva, racer, or Vâgin, horse, [174].
- Asvins, Day and Night, hymn to, [194]–197.
- — the pair of, [224].
- Atharva-Veda, [28], [169].
- Athênê, first conception of, the Dawn, [208].
- Babu Debendranâth Tagore, threw over the Veda, [82].
- Bâdarâyana, [149], [153].
- Bashkirtseff, Marie, [235], [236].
- Bergaigne, M., [192], [203].
- — letter from, [182] n.
- Bhavnagar, [237].
- Blavatsky, Madame, [96], [148]–152.
- Bloomfield’s Concordance of the Veda, [184].
- Bodley, Dr., and Ânandibâi Joshee, [131].
- Bopp, [4], [176].
- Brâhma-dharma, the, [101].
- Brâhmanas, [187].
- Brâhmanical thread, [91].
- Brâhmans, and the published Rig-Veda, [23].
- Brahmo Samâj, [17].
- — — gave up the Veda, [82].
- Brockhaus, Professor, [3].
- Bunsen, his wish to see the Rig-Veda, [170].
- Burnouf, Eugène, [4].
- Chaitanya, fifteenth century, [66].
- — his followers, [67].
- — his teaching, [68] et seq.
- Charis, [208].
- Charites, Gk., [178].
- Child-marriages, [113].
- Child-wife, a, [262].
- Codrington, [185].
- Dakshâyanî, [205] n.
- Dakshinâ, the Dawn, [200], [200] n., [204], [205].
- Dawn, names for, [204].
- Dayânanda Sarasvatî, [93], [148].
- Debendranâth Tagore, [6], [13], [14], [92].
- — — never declared against the Veda, [101].
- Dessau, [2].
- Devas, [20].
- Digambara sect of the Gains, [156].
- Dimêtôr, a god of light, [222].
- Dvârkanâth Tagore, [5]–14, [97].
- — — his hospitality, [12].
- Dyaus, fem., the sky, [173].
- Dyaus, masc. = Zeus, [173].
- Dyaush-pitar, Ζεὺς πατήρ, and Jupiter, [179].
- Dyotanâ, Dawn, [204], [205].
- English translation of a prayer to Vishnu, [100].
- Erasmus, [98].
- Gaurîshankar Udayshankar Ozá, [236].
- — interview with Lord Reay, [240].
- — his work in Bhavnagar, [242].
- — his belief, [245].
- — his retirement into private life, [255].
- — letter from, [256].
- — change of name, [259].
- Gâyatrî, prayer addressed to Savitri, the sun, [173].
- Gods chiefly invoked in the Veda, Agni, fire, Vâyu, air, Sûrya, sun, [173].
- Gokulaji Zâlâ, minister of Junagadh, [260].
- Granth, the, [69], [70].
- Gudrun, [46].
- Guido d’Arezzo, [9].
- Hahn, [185].
- Hare, David, [90].
- Haritas = Χάριτες, [178].
- Hindu life, four periods of, [253].
- Hindus, national character of, [135].
- — are they truthful? 136.
- — entering the Civil Service of India, [141].
- Hotri, priest, [218].
- Index Verborum of the Rig-Veda, [182].
- India, people of, still a secret to us, [161].
- — deep thinkers in, [162].
- Indian correspondents, [15].
- — literature, the ancient, mnemonic, [25].
- — Music, [7]–9.
- — Theosophy, [148].
- Inspiration claimed for the Veda, [83].
- — — for Buddha, [8].
- Jayapura, Mahârâjah of, [96].
- Jupiter Stator, [222].
- Kabîr, “the Great,” [71].
- Kapila, [149].
- Kâtyâyana on the Vedic gods, [173].
- Keshub Chunder Sen, [15], [42], [43], [65], [72], [75]–90, [95].
- — his feelings about Christianity, [76], [79].
- — his visit to England, [85]–88.
- — his study of various religions, [99].
- — selections from the Bibles of the world, [101].
- Mahân Âtmâ, the Great Self, [173].
- Mahâtmans, [105].
- Malabâri, B., [113], [117]–121.
- Mâyâ, illusion, [104].
- Mitra-Varuna, [210].
- Mookerjee, H. C., [90].
- More, Dr. Henry, [64].
- Mozoomdar, [89].
- Muir, J., [13], [51].
- Müller, Otfried, [208].
- Names identical, of deities in Sk., Gk., Latin, &c., [178].
- Nânak, [69].
- — his teaching, [74].
- Nehemiah Goreh, [47].
- — — his life in England, [49], [57].
- — — his book against Christianity, [51].
- — — became a Christian, [51].
- Nescience, [103].
- Oriental courtesy, [157].
- Oxford, young Hindus in, [139]–141.
- Pig, fable of the man who grunted like a, [151].
- Pillai, “Representative Indians,” [160].
- Prime Minister and child-wife, [235].
- Purohita, provost, [218].
- Râdhâkânta Deva, [23], [113].
- — — recognition of the printed Rig-Veda, [27].
- — — his letters, [30], [38].
- — — a conservative, [43].
- Râmabâi, [113], [121].
- Râmabâi, her parents, [123].
- — her lectures, [126].
- — her life in England, [127].
- — her present work, [128].
- Râmakrishna, [105] n.
- — his views, [106], [111], [112].
- — his sayings, [108]–110, [153].
- Râmânuga, commentary of, [153].
- Rammohun Roy, [5], [42], [75].
- — — his feeling for Christianity, [77], [78].
- Râmtonoo Lahari, [90].
- Râtrî, night, [210], [210], n. 3, [224].
- — hymn to, [228].
- Reformers, Hindu, [66].
- Rig-Veda, [168], [170], [171].
- — publication of the, [14], [16], [22], [23].
- — — considered profane, [27], [33].
- Roberts, Lord, “Forty-one Years in India,” [143].
- Rosen, [181].
- Roth, Professor, letter from, [22].
- — on translating the Veda, [183].
- Rozario, D., [91].
- Russians and Indians, [144].
- Sacrifices, [220].
- Samâjes in India, [89] n.
- Sâma-Veda, [168].
- — Benfey’s edition, [28].
- Samkara’s commentary, [153].
- Sandhyâ, twilight, [173] n.
- Sandhyâvandana, [215].
- Sâradânada, [105].
- Sâramêya = Ἐρμείας, [178].
- Saranyû = Ἑρινύς, [178].
- Sat, the cause, [249].
- Satyendranâth Tagore, [6].
- Savitri, [224].
- — the Sun, [173].
- — distinct from Sûrya, [201].
- — Sun, hymn to, [210].
- Sâyana’s commentary, [181].
- Schopenhauer, on the Vedânta, [165].
- Shrâddh ceremonies, [145], [146].
- — presents to M. M., [145].
- Simon, Heinrich, [165].
- Solar Fact, not Theory, [223].
- Solar Theory, [174], [226].
- Soma, hymns to, [227].
- Srîmatî and her husband, [264].
- Srîmatî and her husband, their belief in the Vedânta, [265].
- — her life and death, [267], [268].
- Sûnritâ, Dawn, [201], [204], [208].
- Sutti, [29], [45].
- Tagore family, [6].
- Tawney, C. H., [61], n. 1.
- Theosophist Society, [150].
- Tregear, [185].
- Trita, [224].
- Truthfulness of Hindus, [136], [137].
- Upanishads, [153], [164], [262].
- Ushas, [200]–210.
- — Dawn, hymn to, [200].
- Vairâgya-Sataka, the translations from, [61].
- Varuna, [224], [225].
- — hymn to, [230].
- Varuna and Mitra, [224], [225].
- Veda, the, [167].
- — four collections of hymns, [168].
- Vedânta system, [102], [164], [248] et seq.
- — Schopenhauer on the, [165].
- — objective world is phenomenal, [248].
- Vedânta spirit pervades India, [262].
- Vedântists, modern, [105].
- Vedic hymn, translated by Abp. Thomson, [232].
- — hymns, translations of, [181].
- — — their date, [186].
- — literature, discovery of, [179].
- Vishnu, identified with Agni, [216].
- — an independent deity, [222].
- Vivekânanda, [105], [150], [153].
- Vizianagram, Mahârâjah of, [158].
- — — pays for the reprint of the Rig-Veda, [159]–160.
- Widows in India, [118], [119], [121], [263]–264.
- Wilson, Professor, [9], [181].
- Women, influence of, in India, [84], [85].
- Yagur-Veda, [28], [169].
- Yâska, on the Devatâs of the Rig-Veda, [172], [224].
- Zeus, Dyaus, &c., [221].
OXFORD: HORACE HART
PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
[1]. Chips from a German Workshop, Vol. IV, pp. 35–9.
[2]. Edda, Gylfaginning, 49.
[3]. Sigurdakwida, III, 64; Helreidh Brynhildar, 12.
[4]. Metrical translation by C. H. Tawney, Indian Antiquary, November, 1876.