Volume III
- 65. Gond women grinding corn 42
- 66. Palace of the Gond kings of Garha-Mandla at Rāmnagar 46
- 67. Gonds on a journey 62
- 68. Killing of Rāwan, the demon king of Ceylon, from whom the Gonds are supposed to be descended 114
- 69. Woman about to be swung round the post called Meghnāth 116
- 70. Climbing the pole for a bag of sugar 118
- 71. Gonds with their bamboo carts at market 122
- 72. Gond women, showing tattooing on backs of legs 126
- 73. Māria Gonds in dancing costume 136
- 74. Gondhali musicians and dancers 144
- 75. Gosain mendicant 150
- 76. Alakhwāle Gosains with faces covered with ashes 152
- 77. Gosain mendicants with long hair 154
- 78. Famous Gosain Mahant. Photograph taken after death 156
- 79. Gūjar village proprietress and her land agent 168
- 80. Guraos with figures made at the Holi festival called Gangour 176
- 81. Group of Gurao musicians with their instruments 180
- 82. Ploughing with cows and buffaloes in Chhattīsgarh 182
- 83. Halwai or confectioner’s shop 202
- 84. Jogi mendicants of the Kanphata sect 244
- 85. Jogi musicians with sārangi or fiddle 250
- 86. Kaikāris making baskets 298
- 87. Kanjars making ropes 332
- 88. A group of Kasārs or brass-workers 370
- 89. Dancing girls and musicians 374
- 90. Girl in full dress and ornaments 378
- 91. Old type of sugarcane mill 494
- 92. Group of Kol women 512
- 93. Group of Kolams 520
- 94. Korkus of the Melghāt hills 550
- 95. Korku women in full dress 556
- 96. Koshti men dancing a figure, holding strings and beating sticks 582
Volume IV
- 97. Potter at his wheel 4
- 98. Group of Kunbis 16
- 99. Figures of animals made for Pola festival 40
- 100. Hindu boys on stilts 42
- 101. Throwing stilts into the water at the Pola festival 46
- 102. Carrying out the dead 48
- 103. Pounding rice 60
- 104. Sowing 84
- 105. Threshing 86
- 106. Winnowing 88
- 107. Women grinding wheat and husking rice 90
- 108. Group of women in Hindustāni dress 92
- 109. Coloured Plate: Examples of spangles worn by women on the forehead 106
- 110. Weaving: sizing the warp 142
- 111. Winding thread 144
- 112. Bride and bridegroom with marriage crowns 166
- 113. Bullocks drawing water with mot 170
- 114. Māng musicians with drums 186
- 115. Statue of Marātha leader, Bīmbāji Bhonsla, in armour 200
- 116. Image of the god Vishnu as Vithoba 248
- 117. Coolie women with babies slung at the side 256
- 118. Hindu men showing the choti or scalp-lock 272
- 119. Snake-charmer with cobras 292
- 120. Transplanting rice 340
- 121. Group of Pardhāns 350
- 122. Little girls playing 400
- 123. Gujarāti girls doing figures with strings and sticks 402
- 124. Ornaments 524
- 125. Teli’s oil-press 544
- 126. The Goddess Kāli 574
- 127. Wāghya mendicants 604
Pronunciation
| a | has the sound of | u in but or murmur. |
| ā | has the sound of | a in bath or tar. |
| e | has the sound of | é in écarté or ai in maid. |
| i | has the sound of | i in bit, or (as a final letter) of y in sulky |
| ī | has the sound of | ee in beet. |
| o | has the sound of | o in bore or bowl. |
| u | has the sound of | u in put or bull. |
| ū | has the sound of | oo in poor or boot. |
The plural of caste names and a few common Hindustāni words is formed by adding s in the English manner according to ordinary usage, though this is not, of course, the Hindustāni plural.
Note.—The rupee contains 16 annas, and an anna is of the same value as a penny. A pice is a quarter of an anna, or a farthing. Rs. 1–8 signifies one rupee and eight annas. A lakh is a hundred thousand, and a krore ten million.