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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Minor Tibetan Texts, by Johan van
-Manen
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Minor Tibetan Texts
- 1. The song of the Eastern Snow-mountain
-
-Author: Johan van Manen
-
-Release Date: February 20, 2022 [eBook #67451]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This
- file was produced from images generously made available by
- The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MINOR TIBETAN TEXTS ***
-
-
-
-
- BIBLIOTHECA INDICA:
- A
- Collection of Oriental Works
- PUBLISHED BY THE
- ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL.
- New Series, No. 1426.
-
-
- MINOR TIBETAN TEXTS.
- I.—THE SONG OF THE EASTERN SNOW-MOUNTAIN.
-
-
- BY
- JOHAN VAN MANEN.
-
-
- CALCUTTA:
- PRINTED AT THE BAPTIST MISSION PRESS,
- AND PUBLISHED BY THE
- ASIATIC SOCIETY, 1, PARK STREET.
- 1919.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE.
-
-
-Lewin, in his ‘Manual of Tibetan,’ 1879, preface, states: “Tibet and
-its language are still comparatively unknown ... the familiar tongue of
-the people, their folk-lore, songs and ballads are all unknown.”
-
-Far from contradicting this saying, Jäschke, the greatest Tibetan
-scholar of his time, stated two years later, in 1881, in the preface to
-the third edition of his Tibetan Dictionary: “(To) the student who has
-for immediate object to learn how to read and write the Tibetan
-language ... existing dictionaries (are) almost if not quite useless.”
-
-Since Jäschke’s third edition, two new Tibetan dictionaries have
-appeared. Walsh in an article in the J.A.S.B., Vol. 72, Pt. 1, n. 2,
-1903, reviewing the last one of these, the one by Sarat Chandra Das,
-says, p. 78: “Although the present Dictionary has fulfilled what it
-purposed to be, namely, a complete Dictionary of literary Tibetan, so
-far as our present sources of knowledge go, it does not fulfil the
-requirements of a standard dictionary of the entire language, and the
-standard dictionary of the modern and current Tibetan language has yet
-to be written.”
-
-Laufer, ‘Roman einer Tibetischen Königin,’ 1911, p. 27 et seq., says:
-“We have here to open a road through the jungles, unaided and by
-ourselves; we have to work through text after text and note down
-expressions and idioms as we meet them,” etc.
-
-Grünwedel in ‘Padmasambhava und Verwandtes,’ 1912, pp. 9–10, endorses
-Laufer’s remarks and adds about the difficulty of translating from
-Tibetan: “Ignorance regarding the subject-matter, mistakes and
-misunderstandings in the text itself, and, finally, the insufficiently
-explored idiomatic element of the language, of which the history is as
-yet poorly known, these are the main shoals.... Of all the dictionaries
-only Jäschke’s has really achieved something in the matter of idiom.”
-
-As a matter of fact the printed materials available for the home
-student do not at present enable him, if without the help of a native
-teacher, to translate, accurately and without skipping the
-difficulties, any modern Tibetan book (not even the so-called Tibetan
-Primers in use in Darjeeling) if such books do not happen to belong to
-those excerpted in the existing dictionaries. Jäschke’s, which is the
-best from this point of view, mentions only 25 titles of texts used as
-his sources. Comparing this with the more than 1000 titles quoted by
-Skeat as the sources for the material for his Etymological Dictionary
-of the English language we at once see the inadequacy of such material
-in the case of Tibetan.
-
-It is true that at present more showy results can be obtained by the
-wholesale translation of texts (more with a view to making known their
-general contents, than to the furnishing of a precise philological,
-lexicographical and grammatical analysis), and it is certain that the
-results of such work of translation would be more attractive and
-interesting to the wider public. Yet one of the most valuable
-contributions towards laying a sound basis for future Tibetan
-scholarship is the painstaking, laborious and to a certain extent
-inglorious and humdrum drudging away at small texts with scrupulous
-attention to the smallest minutiae, for a secure fixing of illustrative
-examples by co-ordinating correctness of text, full discussion of
-meanings, sharp formulation of definitions and subtle analysis of all
-questions and problems involved.
-
-The following essay is a first contribution towards an attempt to serve
-such an ideal.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ABBREVIATIONS.
-
-
-adj. = Adjective.
-A.S.B. = Asiatic Society of Bengal.
-Bell = Bell’s Manual.
-Cs., Csoma = Csoma’s Dictionary; if his Grammar is referred to it
- is specifically stated.
-D. = Dutch.
-Desg. = Desgodins, Dictionary.
-dict. = Dictionary.
-dicts. = All existing European Tibetan Dictionaries, but
- especially the three current ones by Jäschke, Sarat
- Chandra Das and Desgodins.
-Dzl. = Dzanglun, ed. and trsl. by Schmidt.
-Ed. = Edition.
-fig. = figuratively.
-G. = German.
-Hannah = Hannah’s Grammar.
-Henderson = Henderson’s Manual.
-Hon. = Honorific.
-J. = Jäschke, Dictionary, 3rd ed.; also Journal.
-L. = Latin.
-l. = line.
-M.A.S.B. = Memoirs, Asiatic Society of Bengal.
-pr. = pronounce, pronunciation.
-prob. = probably.
-q. v. = see.
-S. Ch. D. = Sarat Chandra Das, Dictionary.
-Schmidt = Schmidt’s Dictionary, German Edition.
-Schroeter = Schroeter’s Dictionary.
-Sk. = Sanskrit.
-subst. = Substantive.
-s.v. = sub voce.
-syn(s). = synonym(s), synonymous.
-voc. = vocabulary.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MINOR TIBETAN TEXTS.
-
- Primarily Lexicographically Treated.
-
- By Johan Van Manen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-I. THE SONG OF THE EASTERN SNOW MOUNTAIN.
-
-
-A. INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-In his ‘Mythologie des Buddhismus,’ Grünwedel gives on p. 59 the
-figures of a triad of famous reformers of lamaism; Rje Rin po chʽe,
-better known as Tsoṅ kʽa pa, and his two pupils, Rgyal tsʽab rje and
-Mkʽas grub rje. On pp. 70–72 he gives biographical notes concerning the
-three, and indicates their place and historical importance in lamaism.
-Günther Schulemann, in ‘Die Geschichte der Dalailamas,’ gives in
-chapters II and III a complete compilation of what is known about these
-three.
-
-In the modern Dge lugs pa sect their historical importance has never
-been lost sight of and their memory is kept green by a universal prayer
-or invocation, still in daily use, opening and closing every ceremony
-in a Dge lugs pa monastery. In preceding a ceremony it runs as
-follows:—
-
-
- གངས་ཅན་ཤིང་རྟའི་སྲོལ་འབྱེད་ཙོང་ཁ་པ ༎
- དངོས་སྟོབས་རིག་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་རྒྱལ་ཚབ་རྗེ ༎
- མདོ་སྔགས་བསྟན་པའི་བདག་པོ་མཁས་གྲུབ་རྗེ ༎
- རྒྱལ་བ་ཡབ་སྲས་གསུམ་ལ་ཕྱག་འཚལ་ལོ ༎
-
- To the repairer of the Tibetan vehicle, Tsoṅ kʽa pa (the
- Onionlander),
- To the true, strong, wise Lord Rgyal tsʽab rje (Noble
- Throne-prince),
- To the sūtra and mantra teaching master Mkʽas grub rje (Noble
- Cleverness-perfection)
- To these three victorious (illustrious) Father and Sons (Family of
- three), obeisance!
-
-
-In closing the ceremony the words ལ་ཕྱག་འཚལ་ལོ་ are changed into གྱི་བཀྲ་ཤིས་
-ཤོག་, ‘may their blessing be on us,’ ‘may they bless us.’
-
-When the monks meet for གསོལ་ཇ་, collective or communal tea drinking,
-the last three words are changed into མཆོད་པ་འབུལ་, ‘we give our
-offering,’ said before drinking the first cup and whilst sprinkling a
-few drops in libation with two fingers, the thumb and fourth finger of
-the right hand. At the termination of tea drinking nothing is said at
-all. Except for these changes the formula remains the same for all
-occasions.
-
-Another pupil of Tsoṅ kʽa pa was his own nephew Dge ḥdun grub, about
-whom further particulars are given in the same passages of the two
-works cited above, and who may be called the first Dalai Lama, though
-not known by that title but by that of Rgyal ba, or conqueror. Yet it
-will be seen from the above formula that the three who are together
-called ཡབ་སྲས་ ‘father and sons,’ that is Tsoṅ kʽa pa and his two
-spiritual sons or pupils, are all three called རྒྱལ་བ་. The expression
-ཡབ་སྲས་ has no doubt to be understood as a collective word like ‘group,’
-‘family,’ just like ཕ་མ་ means ‘parents.’
-
-From this དགེ་འདུན་གྲུབ་ a small poem in praise of his teachers, the ཡབ་
-སྲས་, has come to us, which we now publish. Of མཁས་གྲུབ་རྗེ་ it is said that
-he founded a formal cult of his teacher Tsoṅ kʽa pa, and it may be that
-his devotional attitude found a reflection in this poem, showing the
-attitude taken by his own pupil towards him and his two other teachers
-in his turn.
-
-This poem occurs in a miscellaneous collection of religious matter
-(said to comprise about 150 leaves), in a work ཆོས་སྤྱོད་ (‘Religious
-Practice’), leaves 59, 60. I have not been able to see a complete copy
-of this work. In this edition the text is fairly correct and clearly
-legible. A small edition, complete in itself, of which I possess two
-copies (not quite so legible), offers several different readings which
-nearly all seem quite as good, and some decidedly better, than those of
-the larger edition. The differences shown by the two texts are,
-relatively to the size of the poem, so numerous and of such a nature as
-to preclude the idea that mere copying can have led to them. One is led
-to the conclusion that one of the two texts was produced from memory
-and not by actual copying. We shall note the variants furnished by the
-larger edition, marking them B., whilst following for our own text,
-with one exception, duly noted, the smaller edition A. My two copies of
-the smaller edition would seem to be prints from the same blocks but
-for some difference in the last page. Whether the other pages are
-printed from the same blocks, whilst only this one last block has been,
-for one reason or another, renewed (and changed in the process) may be
-left undiscussed for the moment. Enough to make the general statement
-that great care should always be exercised before pronouncing Tibetan
-prints as made or not made from the same blocks, and that, indeed,
-interesting observations may be made on Tibetan typographical
-practices.
-
-The title ཆོས་སྤྱོད་ is a very frequent one in Tibet, and indicates, like
-མདོ་མང་ (as in J. Dict., p. 273b, but not as on p. XXI a), a religious
-miscellany. The particular ཆོས་སྤྱོད་ from which our poem is taken is said
-to be one of the text-books which the Tashilhunpo tapas are required to
-learn by heart. The book with the same title which Laufer (Verzeichniss
-der Tib. Handschr. etc. zu Dresden, Z.D.M.G., 1901, p. 123, n. 135)
-mentions, might or might not be the same. As I have not been able to
-examine the title pages and final pages of the book, I cannot give any
-further information about it. ཆོས་སྤྱོད་ is the marginal short title.
-
-Another Gelukpa prayer of almost equal popularity and frequency as
-those of the one quoted above, is the following which may be used as an
-alternative to the former one. It is distinguished from it in that not
-the ཡབ་སྲས་གསུམ་, but Tsoṅ kʽa pa alone is invoked in it. It runs:—
-
-
- དམིགས་མེད་བརྩེ་བའི་གཏེར་ཆེན་སྤྱན་རས་གཟིགས ༎
- དྲི་མེད་མཁྱེན་པའི་དབང་པོ་འཇམ་པའི་དབྱངས ༎
- བདུད་དཔུང་མ་ལུས་འཇོམས་མཛད་གསང་བའི་བདག །
- གངས་ཅན་མཁས་པའི་གཙུག་རྒྱན་ཙོང་ཁ་པ ༎
- བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པའི་ཞབས་ལ་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས ༎
-
- To the unfathomable great treasury of love, the Down-Looking-One
- (Chenresi, Avalokiteshvara),
- To the immaculate Lord of knowledge, Sweet-voice (Jamyang,
- Mañjughosha),
- To the subduer of the hosts of devils without exception, the Master
- of Mysteries (Chanadorje, Vajrapāṇi),
- To that crown-jewel of Tibetan sages, Tsoṅ kʽa pa,
- To the feet of that (or: thee, o!) Famous Goodheart (Lozangtakpa,
- Sumatikīrti), we pray.
-
-
-The chief difference between the use of the two prayers is that the
-latter is more in private use, whilst the former is more favoured in
-what may be called official meetings and collective acts of worship.
-The latter prayer is often used in a manner like the ‘Oṃ maṇi padme
-hūṃ’ formula, and cases in which a devotee vowed to recite this prayer
-once or more times a 100,000 times are known. The practical purpose of
-the latter prayer was thus defined by a Tibetan: ཚེ་འདི་ལ་གཟུགས་པོ་སྐྱིད་པོ་ན་
-ཚ་མི་ཡོང་བ་ཚེ་རིང་པོ་ཡོང་བ་དང་ ། ཤི་བའི་དུས་ལ་ཡིད་དགའ་ཆོས་འཛིན་ལ་འཁྲིད་རོགས་གནང༌ ༎ To
-ensure (bring, ask for) in (this present, earthly) life: health,
-happiness, absence of sickness, and longevity—and at the time of death
-a happy mind and a firm hold on (grasp of) religion.
-
-The above form of the prayer is the printed one which is used by the
-monks to read aloud, mechanically and repeatedly, as a sort of
-prayer-litany, together with other similar matter, for the benefit of
-their clients, or also to ensure their own salvation. It is said to
-occur in a prayer-book called དགའ་ལྡན་ལྷ་བརྒྱ་མ་, which I have not seen
-myself and about which I have no further details.
-
-This prayer has also some variations in its final line (after the words
-གྲགས་པའི་) according to circumstances. This line ends, when:
-
-
- Opening a ceremony : ཞབས་ལ་ཕྱག་འཚལ་ལོ །
- Closing ,, ,, : ཞབས་ཀྱི་བཀྲ་ཤིས་ཤོག །
- Before tea : ཞལ་ལ་ (or དུ་) མཆོད་པ་འབུལ །
- After ,, : nothing at all is said.
-
-
-It is interesting to note that one of my informants interprets the
-above formula as indicating that Tsoṅ kʽa pa is the simultaneous
-incarnation of Avalokiteshvara, Mañjughosha and Vajrapāṇi, and that
-these persons invoked in the prayer are not referred to as a
-consecutive series of separate entities, but as all embodied in the one
-Tsoṅ kʽa pa. My informant was very insistent about it that this is the
-general and orthodox interpretation of this prayer. The other two names
-of Tsoṅ kʽa pa are འཇམ་མགོན་བླ་མ་ and བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ་.
-
-The closing verse of our poem is also a prayer to Tsoṅ kʽa pa. It is
-also in use elsewhere than in connection with the present booklet and
-occurs elsewhere in print as well. My informant ascribes it to
-Gendundub himself and thinks that its wider use has spread from this
-booklet, though he cannot definitely assure that Gendundub himself did
-not appropriate it for the closing lines of his poem, taking an already
-current prayer to Tsoṅ kʽa pa. The latter theory is plausible inasmuch
-as the last verse is seven-footed as against the eight-footed lines of
-the rest of the poem. Anyhow, the statement that this prayer also
-refers to Tsoṅ kʽa pa alone, and is as such used and understood by all
-Gelukpa monks, settles a doubt we might otherwise entertain as to
-whether it is not addressed to the ཡབ་སྲས་གསུམ་, in which case its final
-line would have to be translated in the plural.
-
-As to the edition, in the original the verses are not marked; they are
-evidently four-lined. The small edition has no divisions at all, except
-marking the lines, but the larger edition has in addition a ༈ (སྦྲུལ་མགོ་ =
-snake head) after lines 16 and 48. In my own text and translation I
-have by typographical disposition and by the introduction of title
-headings indicated my conception of the clever and very logical inner
-structure of the poem.
-
-The text is followed by a short discussion of the variants in it, next
-by a translation, and then, my main business, by a full lexicographical
-discussion, in alphabetical order. This embodies in the first place all
-the new material, supplementing, amplifying, modifying, or even only
-questioning, the data in Jäschke’s Dictionary, 3rd edition. For this
-Dictionary is, as far as lexicographical method is concerned, still
-superior to all other, even subsequent, Tibetan dictionaries, however
-much valuable and additional matter may be contained in the two latter.
-Jäschke’s dictionary is as yet the proper starting point for all future
-lexicographical research. In this glossary I have also drawn special
-attention to contradictions in these three current dictionaries, those
-of Jäschke, Desgodins and Sarat Chandra Das, even to such points for
-which I myself have not been able to suggest a solution or about which
-I could not bring new material. For the good of future lexicographical
-work in the Tibetan field, it is very necessary to point out as many as
-possible of the numerous existing discrepancies and uncertainties
-(especially relating to finer shades of discrimination and precision)
-so as to focus the attention of investigators on them. It is
-unavoidable that most of this work can only be suitably undertaken on
-the spot in consultation with educated, intelligent Tibetans, and not
-in European closets. The number of those in a position to undertake
-such research will, for a long time to come, remain limited enough. As
-indicated in the sub-title of this essay my own main object in writing
-it is primarily a lexicographical one. For this reason I have also
-incorporated in my glossary notes on side-issues and all sorts of
-incidental idiomatic ‘catches’ which cropped up in the discussion of
-our text, though not immediately connected with the poem itself.
-
-As it seemed the handiest way to present all the results of my
-investigation I have also embodied all commentatorial matter, the
-philological notes as distinct from the lexicographical ones, under the
-same alphabet. The few syntactical remarks have also been wedged in in
-this list, though in their case the ‘Stichwort’ had to be chosen more
-or less at haphazard.
-
-In the matter of oral information and illustrative examples embodied in
-this paper, my authorities are nearly exclusively my two Tibetan
-teachers Skarma Bsam Gtan Paul and Pʽun Tsʽogs Lung Rtogs. The first is
-a native of Ghoom, though of pure Tibetan extraction (Kʽams). He has
-resided for nearly a year in Lhasa, for another 3 months in Tashilhunpo
-(where he was Tibetan interpreter between the Tashi Lama and Capt. R.
-Steen, I.M.S.), and for 4 years in Gyangtse. The second is a native of
-Lhasa, where he resided till his 18th year, after which he spent 3
-years in Tashilhunpo as a tapa. Then he wandered for 12 years through
-Tibet, Sikkhim and Nepal, after which he settled in Ghoom since about
-1914. Until recently he was there schoolmaster (dge rgan) in the local
-Tibetan monastery.
-
-Both these intelligent men have given me the greatest help in long,
-patient and painstaking discussions concerning the lexicographical and
-other problems presented by this present text, as well as by several
-others, which I hope I will be able to publish and discuss from time to
-time in the future.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-B. TEXT.
-
-
- ༄༅ ། ། གསུད་མགུར་ཤར་གདས་རི་མ་
- བཞུགས་སོ ༎
-
- ན་མོ་གུ་རུ །
-
-I
-
-I 1 ཤར་གངས་རི་དཀར་པོའི་རྩེ་མོ་ན ༎
- 2 སྤྲིན་དཀར་པོ་གནམ་ལ་བསྙེག་ [1]འདྲ་བ ༎
- 3 དེ་མཐོང་བའི་མོད་ལ་བླ་མ་དྲན ༎
- 4 དྲིན་བསམས་ཤིང་བསམས་ཤིང་དད་པ་སྐྱེས ༎
-
-II 5 སྤྲིན་དཀར་པོ་ལྡིང་བའི་ [2]ཤར་ཕྱོགས་ན །
- 6 འབྲོག་དགེ་ལྡན་རྣམ་པར་རྒྱལ་བ་དེར ༎
- 7 མཚན་བརྗོད་པར་ [3]དཀའ་བའི་རིན [4]པོ་ཆེ ༎
- 8 ཕ་བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ་ཡབ་སྲས་བཞུགས ༎
-
-III 9 ལམ་རིམ་པ་གཉིས་ཀྱི་རྣལ་འབྱོར་སོགས ༎
- 10 ཆོས་ཟབ་ལ་ཤིན་ཏུ་རྒྱས་པར་ [5]གསུངས ༎
- 11 བོད་ཁ་བ་ཅན་གྱི་སྐལ་ལྡན་ལ ༎
- 12 མགོན་ཁྱོད་ཀྱི་བཀའ་དྲིན་བསམ་མི་ཁྱབ ༎
-
-II
-
-IV 13 སྒོས་སྙོམས་ལས་འཛིན་པའི་དགེ་འདུན་གྲུབ །
- 14 བློ་ཅུང་ཟད་ཆོས་ལ་ཕྱོགས་པ་འདི ༎
- 15 རྗེ་ཡབ་སྲས་རྣམས་ཀྱི་བཀའ་དྲིན་ཡིན ༎
- 16 དྲིན་ཆེ་བར་ངེས་ [6]སོ་ཡབ་སྲས་རྣམས [7] ༎
-
-V 17 དུས་འདི་ [8]ནས་བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོའི་བར ༎
- 18 རྗེ་ཡབ་སྲས་ཁྱེད་རྣམས་མ་གཏོགས་པར [9] ༎
- 19 སྐྱབས་རེ་ས་གཞན་དུ་ [10]མི་འཚོལ་བས ༎
- 20 ཐུགས་བརྩེ་ [11]བའི་ལྕགས་ཀྱུས་དྲང་དུ་གསོལ ༎
-
-VI 21 དྲིན་ཇི་བཞིན་འཁུར་བར་མ་ནུས་ཀྱང་ ༎
- 22 སེམས་ཆགས་སྡང་དབང་དུ་མ་སོང་བར [12] ༎
- 23 མགོན་ཁྱོད་ཀྱི་བསྟན་པ་འཛིན་པ་ལ ༎
- 24 དུས་ནམ་ཡང་བརྩོན་ [13]པར་ [14]བགྱིད་པར་སྨོན ༎
-
-III
-
-VII 25 ལར་ད་ལྟ་གངས་རིའི་ཁྲོད་འདི་ན ༎
- 26 རང་བསྟན་པ་འཛིན་པར་ཁས་ལེན་ཞིང་ [15] ༎
- 27 གཞན་བསྟན་འཛིན་དགྲ་བོའི་དྭངས་མར་འཛིན ༎
- 28 ཚུལ་འདི་ལ་སྐྱོ་བ་གཏིང་ནས་སྐྱེས ༎
-
-VIII 29 གཞན་འཕུང་ [16]བར་འདོད་པའི་ཀུན་སློང་ [17]དང་ ༎
- 30 རྒྱུད་མཚན་འཛིན་དམ་པོས་བཅིངས་ལགས་ཀྱང་ ༎
- 31 ལམ་མཐོན་པོར་གནས་པའི་ཁས་ལེན་བྱེད ༎
- 32 འདི་བརྟགས་ན་ཀུན་གྱིས་ [18]ཁྲེལ་ [19]བའི་རྒྱུ ༎
-
-IX 33 ལམ་གོལ་སར་རྒས་པའི་སྡུག་ཡུས་ཀྱིས ༎
- 34 ཆོས་ཚུལ་བཞིན་བྱེད་ [20]པའི་གང་ཟག་ལ ༎
- 35 རྒྱུད་ཁོང་ནས་འཁྲུགས་ [21]པའི་གདུག་སེམས་ཅན ༎
- 36 གདོན་ཐུགས་ལ་ཞུགས་པ་མ་ལགས་སམ ༎
-
-IV
-
-X 37 དགྲ་ཉོན་མོངས་འདུལ་ཐབས་ [22]མི་བྱེད་པར ༎
- 38 གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་ཙམ་གྱི་བཤད་ [23]ཉན་ཡང་ ༎
- 39 འདྲེ་ཤར་སྒོའི་ཕྱོགས་སུ་གནས་པ་ལ ༎
- 40 གླུད་ནུབ་སྒོར་གཏོང་ [24]བ་[24]དོན་རེ་ཆུང་ ༎
-
-XI 41 དོན་དེ་ལྟར་གོ་བའི་བཤེས་གཉེན་པ [25] ༎
- 42 སྤྱིར་ལུས་ཅན་ཀུན་ལ་བཀའ་དྲིན་བསམ [26] ༎
- 43 སྒོས་ཆོས་མཛད་ཡོངས་ལ་དག་སྣང་སྦྱོང་ [27] ༎
- 44 དགྲ་ནང་ན་འདུག་པའི་ཉོན་ [28]མོངས་[28]འདུལ[28] ༎
-
-XII 45 མི་ཁོ་བོའི་རྗེས་མཇུག་གྲོགས་པོ་ [29]རྣམས [30] ༎
- 46 ཡིད་ཕྱོགས་སུ་ལྷུང་བས་ [31]མ་[31]འཆང་[31]བར[31] ༎
- 47 བློ་ [32]གཟུ་བོར་གནས་པའི་རྟོག་དཔྱོད་ཀྱིས །
- 48 ལམ་དྲང་པོར་ [33]ཞུགས་པ་ཅིས་ཀྱང་ལེགས ༎ [34]
-
-V
-
-XIII 49 གཏམ་འདི་ལ་བརྟེན་ནས་འགྲོ་བ་རྣམས [35] ༎
- 50 བྱམས་སྙིང་རྗེས་དྲངས་པའི་སེམས་བསྐྱེད་དང་ ༎
- 51 དབྱིངས་སྤྲོས་བྲལ་རྟོགས་པའི་ལྟ་བ་ཡིས ༎
- 52 དཔལ་བླ་མེད་བྱང་ཆུབ་མྱུར་ཐོབ་ཤོག ༎
-
-VI
-
-XIV 53 སྐུ་ལ་མཚན་དཔེའི་དཔལ་འབར་ཞིང་ ༎
- 54 གསུང་དབྱངས་ཡན་ལག་དྲུག་ཅུས་བརྒྱན ༎
- 55 ཐུགས་ནི་ཟབ་ཡངས་མཁྱེན་བརྩེའི་གཏེར ༎
- 56 དཔལ་ལྡན་བླ་མའི་བཀྲ་ཤིས་ཤོག །
-
- ཅེས་པ་འདི་ནི་ཐམས་ཅད་ [36]མཁྱེན་པ་ཆེན་པོ་དགེ་འདུན་གྲུབ་པ་དཔལ་བཟང་
- པོས་གདུང་[36]དབྱངས་སུ་མཛད་པའོ ༎
- བཀྲ་ཤིས ༎
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-C. THE VARIANTS.
-
-
-The texts used were two small blockprints, nearly identical A 1 and A
-2, and a large blockprint B.
-
-On the whole A furnishes a good text and it may be used as the basis
-for the edition. Two curious cases of the use of བ་ for པ་ (7. 45) seem
-more than mere negligence of the wood-cutter in connection with the
-badly printed པའི་ in l. 13 (which looks also like བའི་) and also a པ་
-like བ་ in l. 23. Inversely there is a clear པ་—ཐཔས—in l. 37 and a བོར་
-for པོར་ in l. 48. A 2 twice lacks the hook in རྩ (20, 24) and the naro
-ོ in lines 29, 47. These two latter variants may be due to
-deterioration in the blocks or the roughness of the paper, or defective
-inking. Otherwise A 1 and A 2 are practically identical, and except for
-the last pages (the last two of A 1 are condensed into a single one in
-A 2) the two copies may have been printed from the same blocks.
-
-In 5 B writes ལྡིང་པའི་ for བའི་ as authorized by the Dicts. But the
-question of final particles is still far from being satisfactorily
-settled. The Dicts. are on the whole much at variance on this point.
-Desg. gives as a rule a greater variety of them than J.
-
-Some differences in the tenses of the verb are presented by the two
-copies of A on one side and B on the other. In l. 2 སྙེག་ is the present
-tense as against the past form བསྙེག་ in A. As to the sense both would
-do, and though the past form in Tibetan is better rendered in English
-by the present we may understand the past form as ‘has begun to rise.’
-In verse XI B gives imp. forms, making the sense one of command whereas
-A has present forms giving a mere statement. The final ས་ in སོམས་,
-however, is not recorded in the Dicts., nor the form སྦྱོངས་; ཐུལ་,
-however, is a regularly recognised imp. form.
-
-འཁྲུགས་ in l. 35 is a correct past tense. The form ཁྲུག་ (without an
-initial འ་) as in B is not recorded, though འཁྲུག་, present, might do
-equally well. འཁྲེལ་, l. 32, is not authorized by the Dicts. which all
-omit the initial འ་. The substitution of འཆད་ for བཤད་ (38) seems to
-lack sufficient urgency, though J. records a འཆད་ཉན་པ་ ‘to listen to an
-explanation’ from Sch. A འཕུང་, l. 29, is correct according to the
-Dicts., not ཕུང་ of B, though J. and S. Ch. D. give the alternative
-spelling.
-
-In the treatment of grammatical particles A is superior to B. པར་ (10)
-is correct, not པ་ B. It is an adverbial construction. In 18, པར་, and
-22, བར་, equally so. In 24 པར་ is a terminative dependent on བགྱིད་པ་.
-
-The remaining variants are all in the nature of equivalents for or
-against which nothing (or the same!) can be said, and which would do as
-well as the readings we have adopted. Many of them are, however,
-curious for this reason, that they are not homonymous variants at all
-and consequently substitutions for, not corruptions of, the text. We
-have to leave the question alone whether those in A or in B are likely
-to be the original ones.
-
-In 7, དྲིན་པོ་ཆེ་, very kind, is as good as རིན་པོ་ཆེ་, very precious; in 17
-དུས་འདི་ནས་ means practically the same as དུས་དེང་ནས་, ‘from this moment’,
-and ‘from this very day.’ In 19 གཞན་དུ་ ‘in another’ seems even a trifle
-better than གཞན་ནས་ ‘from another.’ གྱིས་ seems better in 32 than ཀྱང་ in
-B, ‘even, indeed!’ བྱེད་པ་ ‘to perform,’ in l. 34, is as good as བསྒྲུབ་པ་,
-also ‘to perform, accomplish,’ and the future form of the latter would
-be better if changed into a pf. form བསྒྲུབས་ or pr. སྒྲུབ་. In l. 40 གཏོང་བ་,
-‘the sending, throwing,’ seems as good as སྐྱེལ་བཞིན་, ‘(as silly) as the
-conveying.’ In 41 the article པ་ means the same as plural རྣམས་ B. In
-44, བདག་འཛིན་, ‘egotism, selfishness,’ is substituted for ཉོན་མོངས་,
-‘sin’; similarly in 45 and 49 ཀུན་ ‘all,’ for རྣམས་ ‘many.’ Lastly, the
-difficult construction ལྷུང་བས་མ་འཆང་བར་, in 46, is replaced in B by the
-easier ལྷུང་བར་མི་བྱེད་པར་, ‘not allowing (letting, making) it [the soul]
-(to) fall’ instead of ‘letting it remain fallen when once it has done
-so.’
-
-All these examples seem to point out that one of the blockprints
-(probably the larger one) was derived from a version which was not
-actually copied from the original but rather written down from memory.
-The variants are no cutting or copying mistakes except ངེས་སོ་ and ངས་སོ་
-l. 16, and དྲིན་པོ་ཆེ་ and རིན་པོ་ཆེ་ in l. 7.
-
-In l. 26 we find an erroneous ཅིང་ for ཞིང་.
-
-The two ༈ at the end of lines 16 and 48 in B (or rather at the
-beginning of the following lines, for that is where they must be put if
-the Tibetan text is printed line for line like English verse) do not
-agree with my conception of the structure of the poem as indicated by
-my typographical arrangement of it. I would not have expected a ༈ after
-line 16 but after lines 12, 24, 36 and 48. The occurrence of the sign
-after line 48 may, however, be taken to indicate that the next two
-verses have to be regarded as appendices to the body of the poem
-proper.
-
-It must be mentioned that in the title, in both copies of A., the final
-word is བཞུགས་. In B., as the poem occurs in the body of the volume,
-there is no equivalent title. I have written བཞུགས་སོ༷་ without prejudice
-to the question whether the form བཞུགས་ is legitimate or not. My
-teachers say that before a ༎ the སོ་ is required.
-
-The only reading taken from B is ངེས་ for the incomprehensible ངས་ of A
-1 and 2, in line 16.
-
-It may be, finally, remarked that the three copies from which this
-edition was prepared, show once more that textual correctness and
-perfection of typographical execution are not necessarily related in
-Tibet. The two small prints which are, but for the single omission of a
-dengbu in line 16, quite correct, are small, badly printed on bad
-paper, and not carefully or neatly cut. The larger copy is neat, well
-printed on good paper, very legible, but not nearly so satisfactory as
-a text.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-D. TRANSLATION.
-
-THE SONG OF THE EASTERN SNOW MOUNTAIN.
-
-
-OBEISANCE TO THE TEACHER.
-
-I. (His Teachers).
-
-1. On the peak of the white snow mountain in the East
- A white cloud seems to be rising towards the sky.
- At the instant of beholding it I remember my teacher
- And, pondering over his kindness, faith stirs in me.
-
-2. To the East of where that cloud is floating,
- In that entirely victorious Virtue Solitude,
- There resided the precious ones, difficult to be invoked,
- Father Famous Goodheart, the Sire with (his two spiritual) sons.
-
-3. The yoga and other (teachings) of the two stages of the road
- Relating to the profound Doctrine, they preached most fully.
- To the pious of snowy Tibet
- Your grace, O protectors, was ineffable.
-
-II. (Himself).
-
-4. Especially that this ease-loving Clergy-Perfection
- Has turned his mind a little towards the Doctrine
- Is (thanks to) the kindness of these noble father and sons.
- Truly your kindness is great, O father and sons.
-
-5. From now onward till (I reach) the heart of saintship,
- Whilst, except in you, noble father and sons,
- I will not place my hope for protection in anyone else,
- I pray you to drag me along with your mercy-hook.
-
-6. Though I cannot repay you in proportion to whatever your favours
- have been,
- I pray that, with my soul not enslaved by attraction or repulsion,
- I may hold fast to your teaching, O protectors,
- And may always put my best energy into the endeavour.
-
-III. (His Contemporaries).
-
-7. However, nowadays, in this snow mountain solitude,
- (There are those who) whilst promising to follow the teaching
- themselves,
- Regard others, who (equally) follow the teaching, as their veriest
- enemies.
- Such conduct calls forth the deepest sorrow.
-
-8. With thoughts wishing the ruin of others
- And with souls fettered by fierce ambition,
- They nevertheless promise to dwell on the high road.
- If we consider this (carefully) it is a matter of shame for all
- concerned.
-
-9. These malignant beings,
- Angry because they find themselves in their old age in the wrong
- road,
- And raging from the bottom of their hearts
- Against those persons who have (duly) acted conform to the Doctrine,
- Has not a demon entered their minds?
-
-IV. (His Pupils).
-
-10. Not to take steps to conquer the enemy, sin,
- But yet after mere reproach to flare up in reply,
- That is as silly as,
- When an evil spirit is at the Eastern door,
- To throw the ransom towards the Western door.
-
-11. Those virtue-friends who understand that this is so,
- Think of all embodied beings in general with kindness,
- But saintly thoughts especially of all who devote themselves to the
- Doctrine.
- And they subdue the enemy residing within, sin.
-
-12. O, my followers and friends,
- Whilst not letting your souls remain fallen after a lapse,
- But whilst examining (yourselves constantly) whether your minds keep
- to righteousness,
- To remain on the straight road, that surely is good.
-
-V. (Final Prayer).
-
-13. May all those who believe in these words,
- With a mind bent on the drawing on of all beings by means of love
- and mercy,
- Through the (direct) vision of the actionless state of (pure)
- knowledge,
- Speedily obtain (that) glorious, supreme saintship.
-
-VI. (Final Blessing).
-
-14. He, whose body blazes with the marks and beauties (as of a Buddha),
- Whose speech is adorned with the sixty branches of melody,
- Whose deep and wide mind, indeed, is a treasury of omniscient love,
- May that glorious teacher’s blessing be on us.
-
-The above was composed by the Great Omniscient Clergy Perfection
-Good-Glory as a song in loving memory.
-
-Blessing.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-E. GLOSSARY AND NOTES.
-
-(LEXICOGRAPHICAL, SYNTACTICAL AND MATERIAL.)
-
-
-ཀུག་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ཀུན་གྱིས་ཁྲེལ་བའི་རྒྱུ་, 32. Not so much ‘a matter of shame to all’ (= all the
-people who look at or into the matter, the beholders, the general
-public, or even humanity in general), but rather ‘a matter of all (of
-them) being ashamed,’ i.e. the people doing the shameful acts, the
-people concerned, engaged in this conduct, not the public in general.
-
-ཀུན་སློང་, 29. Here thought, conception, wish (cf. D. opwelling). (Desg.
-‘all-enveloping,’ i.e. ‘natural corruption or sin,’ p. 8b, but ཀུན་སློང་ =
-ཉོན་མོང་གི་སློང་, ‘excitement of passion’ on p. 1044a). See also S. Ch. D.,
-p. 29b, समुत्पाद, but Schroeter, p. 2b, ‘approbation, assent, the
-consenting to any proposition.’
-
-ཀོ་ཀོ་ see གླུད་.
-
-ཀྱང་, 30. Here equal to ཡིན་ན་ཡང་, ‘yet, however, nevertheless.’
-
-ཀྱུ་, 20. Not as a separate word in J., who gives ཀུག་ and ཀྱོ་བ་, the
-latter after Schmidt. This is the word occurring in the compound ཞབས་ཀྱུ་
-the Tibetan u-vowel, the ‘foot-hook’ (not merely honorific of ཀྱུ་ as
-Hannah seems to suggest in his Grammar of the Tibetan Language, p. 4),
-which J. has under ཞབས་, on p. 472a, together with a queried meaning
-‘spur’ (of the foot: ‘ein Sporn’), taken from Csoma. This latter
-meaning is unknown to my informants. Bell gives: hook ཀུག་; fishhook ཉ་
-ཀུག་, but iron hook ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་. Henderson gives both ཁུག་ and ཀྱུ་ for hook,
-and also ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ alone for iron hook. My informants deny the correctness
-of ཁུག་. Desg. knows ཀུག་ (པ་) only as a verb, not as a subst.; he
-mentions ཀྱུ་ as a separate word, subst. hook, and does not mention ཀྱོ་བ་.
-The various articles in the three Dicts. sub ཁུག་ are interesting but
-the meaning hook is not given in any of them. S. Ch. D. translates ཀྱོ་བ་
-with ‘अङ्कुश, a pointed iron hook, a large pin to pierce with,’ whilst
-Macdonell in his Sk. dict. translates the Sk. word as ‘hook, goad,
-stimulus, remedy.’ (See below s.v. འདྲེན་པ་.) J. under ཀུག་ gives also
-ལྕགས་ཀུག་, an iron hook, and ཉ་ཀུག་, a fishing hook, but my informants say
-that the colloquial for fish hook is rather ཉ་འཛིན་ཡའི་ (or པའི་) ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་
-or simply ཉ་འཛིན་ (pr. nyendzin), just as a meat hook (to hang up meat
-on) is ཤ་འཛིན་ (pr. shendzin). The ཡ་ in the above represents the
-pronunciation of the more illiterate people.
-
-One of my informants is, however, of opinion that ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ does not mean
-an iron hook at all, but hook in general even though it might be made
-of silver, copper, gold, etc. He compares it with the word wall, ལྕགས་
-རི་, which is not necessarily made of iron, and though of stone or earth
-is still called ‘iron-mountain.’ Women’s ornaments such as earrings,
-chains, or necklaces (སྐེ་འཕྲེང་, pr. kenthang, not in the Dicts. or Bell.
-As a colloquial word the dengbu might perhaps be left out in writing)
-may have golden or silver hooks, གསེར་གྱི་ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ or དངུལ་གྱི་ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་. Example:
-སྐྱེ་དམན་འདི་ལ་སྐྱེ་འཕྲེང་ཡག་པོ་ཅིག་འདུག། དེ་ལ་གསེར་དང་དངུལ་གྱི་ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་བཞི་འདུག་, this
-woman has a very fine necklace which has four golden and silver hooks
-(or clasps). Schroeter’s dict., p. 361b, already gives ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ as hook
-only. The expression ལྕགས་ནག་ in the sense of mineral, given by Desg.,
-307a, would make us think that ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ might perhaps mean metal hook,
-but see below. S. Ch. D. adds to the confusion. Under ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ he gives:
-(1) iron pin to guide and punish elephants; fish-hook; (2) name of a
-plant. (His next entry seems improbable, elephant driving and elephant
-driver for one and the same word). But under ཀྱུ་ he defines ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ as
-‘iron hook, an angle, a fishing-hook.’ J. has ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ under ལྕགས་ and
-gives ‘an iron hook, esp. fishing-hook, angle; often fig.’ and in his
-illustration he translates ཆོས་ཀྱི་ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ simply as ‘hook of grace.’ He
-marks the word as belonging to the book language. It is curious to note
-that Schlagintweit in his Rgyal-rabs (title, or introductory verse)
-translates the word ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ with ‘eisernen Hacken’ (p. 25), whilst
-Schiefner renders the same word correctly on the next page by ‘Hacken’
-alone. But in his new translation of the Rgyal-rabs, H. A. Francke
-(J.P.A.S.B., Vol. VI, n. 8, p. 397) writes again ‘Iron Hook.’
-
-There is still another compound with ཀྱུ་, namely མཐེབ་ཀྱུ་, the name for a
-component part of the elaborate torma cake structure. It indicates a
-small piece of dough in the form of the top of the thumb. From all
-these examples it might be hazarded that the element ཀྱུ་ means primarily
-‘curve, curved’ or ‘curvature,’ and has no substantial meaning like
-‘hook’ or the like. My teachers, however, think that ཀྱུ་ by itself is a
-substantive ‘hook.’ So it is not clear whether J. is right as against
-the other Dicts. in not entering the word separately. The above
-discussion is in any case better entered under the word ཀྱུ་, whether
-this is really an independent word or not. The fact that S. Ch. D.
-gives a Sk. equivalent for ཀྱུ་ alone, pleads for its separate existence.
-
-My teachers opine that ཀྱུ་ as a separate word may occur alone, but their
-nearest approach to framing a sentence illustrating such a use was one
-in which they spoke of a wooden hook (made by a jungleman to fish or
-hunt with) as ཤིང་གི་ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ or more briefly ཤིང་ཀྱུ་. So the example was not
-decisive.
-
-Additional Note—Cf. the example in Csoma’s Grammar, p 109: གསེར་གྱི་ལྕགས་
-སྒྲོག་, golden fetters or chains, lit.: golden iron ropes. See also
-Ramsay, ‘Western Tibet’, p. 62:
-
-‘To hook—ngiákuk táng ches, properly applicable only to a fish caught
-with a hook, but also used generally’, and:
-
-‘Hook—ngiákuk (fish hook), kuk kuk (a hook of any kind)....’
-
-Query: Is the use of ལྕགས་ merely conventional in several words, as in
-ལྕགས་ཁྲ་, cage (Bell, Walsh ‘Tromowa Dialect’), ལྕགས་ཟམ་ (iron) bridge,
-etc.? And is the use of ལྕགས་ perhaps analogous to that of honorific
-prefixes? Cf. the Dutch guilder (gulden) which is made of silver,
-though its name is derived from ‘gold.’
-
-ཀྱོ་བ་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-དཀའ་བ་, 7. Difficult, but here rather with some of the meaning of the
-English ‘hard’ (hard lines?), the French ‘dur’, perhaps L. ‘arduus.’
-The meaning is somewhat that the invocation should not be undertaken
-lightly (God’s name should not be spoken ‘in vain’). Conceptions like:
-grave, serious, weighty, not lighthearted, or commonplace, or flippant,
-suggest themselves here. It is ‘a serious matter’ to invoke these
-teachers.
-
-བཀའ་དྲིན་སེམས་པ་, 42. To think with kindness of or towards, or about (ལ་).
-
-སྐལ་ལྡན་, 11. We have taken this word in the general sense given by J.
-‘the pious,’ though it may equally well be rendered by ‘the fortunate
-ones,’ i.e. those who were fortunate enough to hear Tsoṅ kʽa pa’s
-preaching or that of his two pupils. One of my informants suggests,
-however, that སྐལ་ལྡན་ should here be taken more literally as ‘sharers’,
-‘share-havers’ in Tsoṅ kʽa pa’s message and consequently should here be
-understood as his ‘followers.’
-
-སྐུ་གླུད་ see གླུད་.
-
-སྐེ་འཕྲེང་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-སྐྱབས་རེ་ས་, 19. May either be taken as two separate words ‘protection and
-hope’ or as a compound ‘hope for protection,’ ‘protection-hope.’ More
-accurately ‘the spot (place = persons in this case) in whom I place my
-hope for protection, to whom I resort or go, in whom I trust, for
-protection.’ (cf. D. heul, toeverlaat).
-
-སྐྱིད་གླུ་ see མགུར་མ་.
-
-སྐྱེ་སྒོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-སྐྱེ་བ་, 4. This is an illustration of the meaning of སྐྱེ་བ་ under J.’s 4th
-sub-heading, 1st division. དད་པ་སྐྱེས་ ‘faith has been born,’ but here
-rather ‘becomes active,’ ‘sprouts,’ ‘waxes strong,’ or ‘grows, flames
-up, intensifies, awakens, arises, stirs.’ The idea is not, as in a case
-of Christian conversion, of a state of previously non-existent faith,
-suddenly arising, but of an existing faith becoming strongly energised,
-leaping up (‘an outburst of faith’). The colloquial དད་པ་སྐྱེས་ can be
-suitably translated by ‘to inspire faith to.’ For instance བླ་མ་འདི་ལ་དད་
-པ་སྐྱེས་ཀྱི་ (མི་) འདུག་, that lama inspires me with (no) faith. A free
-translation of དད་པ་སྐྱེ་བ་ is consequently ‘to have faith in,’ but in our
-passage the additional meaning of ‘renewed’ is implied. Therefore we
-may also render ‘they call up my faith’ or ‘renewed faith comes up in
-me.’ See the use of this expression in the Tibetan Primer III, p. 7, 1.
-8. དེ་ནས་ཁོ་ (read ཁོས་) རྒྱལ་པོ་དེ་ཤིན་ཏུ་བཟང་པོར་ཤེས་ཏེ་དད་པ་སྐྱེས་ཏེ་ཕྱག་གྲངས་མེད་འཚལ་
-ནས་རྒྱལ་པོས་གནང་བ་དེ་རྣམས་བདག་ག་ལ་ཞུ ། Then he, recognising that the king was
-very good, and having gained faith in him, and having prostrated
-himself numberless times, (asked) how can I request (i.e. take, accept)
-such (gifts) given by the king.
-
-སྐྱེད་སྒོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-སྐྱེད་པ་, 50. To generate, the generation, production. སེམས་བསྐྱེད་པ་ ‘that
-which has been produced in the soul,’ ‘the (completed) productions of
-the soul’; with དང་ = with; ‘with thoughts of, assuming, observing an
-attitude of, with a mental attitude of or disposition to.’ འགྲོ་བ་རྣམས་
-བྱམས་སྙིང་རྗེས་དྲངས་པའི་སེམས་བསྐྱེད་ (དང་) is one elaborate substantive, a
-‘the-beings-with-kindness-having-drawn-soul-disposition.’
-
-སྐྱོ་བ་, 28. Here not in J.’s sense ‘to be weary,’ but as Desg. and S. Ch.
-D. have it ‘sadness, grief, sorrow,’ or adj. ‘sad’, etc. In seeing a
-half-naked beggar, it may be said: མི་འདི་སྐྱོ་བ་ལ་ཁོ་ལ་དུག་ལོག་ཡང་མི་འདུག་. Here
-the word is adjective: ‘that unhappy (unfortunate, wretched, miserable)
-man has not even a coat.’ [དུག་ལོག་ (Bell) = J. དུག་པོ་ = གོས་ལག་ = ཆུ་པ་ =
-Desg. ཆོ་པ་, coat, garment, dress; not alone ‘man’s coat,’ as J. has it,
-but for both sexes—J. s.v. ཆུ་པ་. ཆུ་པ་ and ཆོ་པ་ both missing in S. Ch.
-D. གོས་ལག་ is pronounced both golak and gölak. Walsh, Vocabulary Tromowa
-Dialect, s.v. coat ‘go’ and ‘golag.’ My teachers do not know a word དུག་
-པོ་ for coat in Tibetan. Desg. has a དུགས་པོ་, overcoat. S. Ch. D. དུག་པ༌
-or དུག་པོ་ ‘old coat or garment patched up and mended.’]
-
-ག་གདན་ see གདན་.
-
-ཁ་རྩོད་ see གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་.
-
-ཁ་གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་ see གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་.
-
-ཁུག་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ཁོ་བོའི་རྗེས་མཇུག་གྲོགས་པོ་རྣམས་, 45. My followers and friends (cf. citizens and
-compatriots), i.e. followers who are also my friends; the same people
-under two qualifications, not two different groups of people, the
-friends and the followers. See རྗེས་མཇུག་པ་.
-
-ཁོ་མི་གླུད་ཡིན་ see གླུད་.
-
-ཁྱེད་ 18, ཁྱོད་ 12, 23. The difference in form is not accidental. མགོན་ཁྱོད་
-is a stereotyped ལབ་ལུགས་, manner of speech, expression. ཡབ་སྲས་ཁྱེད༌, l.
-18, is a normal honorific form. The form ཁྱོད་ was described to me as one
-of intimacy, of utter confidence, as distinct from familiarity and lack
-of respect. This seems an almost exact parallel to the use of (thou),
-tu, du in (English), French and German in addressing parents, God, and
-relations. The following example was given, a quotation from the བླ་མ་
-མཆོད་པའི་ཆོ་ག་, a little ritual gelukpa book, leaf 12a: ཁྱོད་ནི་བླ་མ་ཁྱོད་ནི་ཡི་
-དམ་ཁྱོད་ནི་མཁའ་འགྲོ་ཆོས་སྐྱོང་སྟེ ། ‘As thou art our lama, our yi-dam, our ḍākinī,
-our dharmapāla ...’ (prayer addressed to Tsoṅ kʽa pa). Likewise, in the
-little prayerbook རྗེ་བཙུན་སྒྲོལ་མའི་གདུང་འབོད་ (to Tārā) we find a few cases of
-ཁྱོད་ (e.g. p. 5b) amidst many cases of ཁྱེད་. In the term ཡབ་སྲས་ཁྱེད་ the
-hon. form of the first two syllables of course determines the hon. form
-of the last. The ‘intimate’ form ཁྱོད་ was further described as ‘the
-language of religious transport, ardour, fervour,’ དད་པའི་ཡུས་.
-
-ཁྲེལ་གད་ (རྒྱབ་པ་) see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཁྲེལ་དགོད་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཁྲེལ་བ་, 32. According to the Dicts. ‘to be ashamed.’ Desg. and S. Ch. D.
-do not support J.’s meaning ‘piety’ and his third meaning ‘disgust,
-aversion.’ My oral information rejects these second and third meanings,
-yet see below. ཀུན་གྱིས་ཁྲེལ་བའི་རྒྱུ་, freely translated ‘is a matter of (cause
-for) shame to all,’ literally ‘a-by-all-shame-feeling-cause,’ i.e. all
-should feel ashamed. The shame, it should be understood, must be felt,
-not by all who behold the bad behaviour, but by all who are guilty of
-it. The exact meaning of the root ཁྲེལ་ from which the verb is derived is
-not yet satisfactorily dealt with in the Dicts. which are supplementary
-as well as contradictory in their data. The compounds exhibit a great
-variety of shades of meaning. That of ཁྲེལ་མེད་, for instance, may perhaps
-cover so wide a range as ‘shameless, impudent, self-willed, stubborn,
-stiff-necked, arrogant, insolent, ungrateful, loveless, heartless,
-harsh, cruel, wanton, ruchlos, frech.’ Some of the compounds and
-applications clearly indicate that ཁྲེལ་ must also mean ‘sexual modesty,
-chastity,’ others that it must mean ‘bashfulness, shyness, timidity’
-(in this sense ཁྲེལ་མེད་ ‘brazen, forward, unabashed, saucy, bold,
-audacious’). ཁྲེལ་ seems to come very near to the D. ‘schroom’ which is
-more ‘diffidence’ than ‘scruple,’ but ཁྲེལ་མེད་ may in some cases mean
-‘unscrupulous’ or ‘without a conscience.’ In this sense it comes near
-to ‘impious.’ The German subst. ‘Scheu’ may be also compared. It is
-also averred that in certain combinations a positive statement with ཁྲེལ་
-མེད་ is practically identical with the English exclamation: how dare
-you! how can you!
-
-A compound, difficult to define exactly, is ཁྲེལ་གཞུང་མེད་ in which གཞུང་
-has the meaning, not given in the Dicts. of straight, straightforward,
-honest, true, dependable, the French ‘droit’ (cf. rectitude). The whole
-expression may mean ‘abandoned,’ or simply ཁྲེལ་མེད་. Example ཁྲེལ་གཞུང་མེད་
-པའི་མི་དེ་ཡི་ཚེ་དེ་དོན་མེད་རེད་, ‘the lives of these abandoned (shameless, etc.)
-men are useless.’ An old sweetheart who has cast off her lover may be
-called ཁྲེལ་གཞུང་མེད་ ‘the brazen, perfidious girl.’ Desg. gives གཞུང་ in
-this sense as equal to བཟང་, ‘good, just, generous.’ This may be
-Schmidt’s གཞུངས་པ་ ‘sincere, orderly.’ In the sentence ཕ་མ་ལ་སྐུ་དྲིན་འདི་འདྲ་
-ལོག་པ་དེ་ཁྲེལ་མེད་ཀྱི་སེམས་རེད་, ‘to render your parents kindness in this way
-shows a lack of gratitude,’ my teachers explain the word as
-‘ungrateful, loveless, harsh.’
-
-As far as the further meanings of ཁྲེལ་, as given in J. (see above), are
-concerned, Pʽun Tsʽogs maintains that ཁྲེལ་སེམས་ཅན་ = ཆོས་སེམས་ཅན་, ‘pious,’
-but Karma denies it, and the former also states that ཁྲེལ་ཡོད་པ་ = ཞེན་པ་
-ལོག་པ་, which latter expression Desg. and S. Ch. D. know as ‘to be
-disgusted with.’ But J. and the others render the former expression
-with ཁྲེལ་, as ‘chaste’ or ‘modest,’ or as ‘to be chaste,’ etc. Both of
-my teachers are at one about the expression ཞེ་ཁྲེལ་བ་ ‘to be weary,
-tired, sick of.’ Examples: ལྟོ་ཆས་འདི་ལ་ཞེ་ཁྲེལ་སོང་, I am tired of this food.
-(ལྟོ་ཆས་, pr. tobché, see Henderson’s Manual, Voc., p. 48, s.v. food;
-there written ལྟོབ་ཆས་.) མི་འདི་ལ་ཞེ་ཁྲེལ་སོང་, ‘I have got tired of this man.’
-The sentence ཆོས་ཐོས་པས་རྒྱུད་གྲོལ་ནས ། ཁྲེལ་ཡོད་ངོ་ཚ་ཤེས་ was explained to me as:
-Having understood the doctrine, and having been delivered (saved), I am
-now weary of the world, have renounced the world, know the world for
-vanity, have turned away from it. For J.’s ཁྲེལ་གད་, ‘scornful laughter’,
-the synonym ཁྲེལ་དགོད་ was given to me, as well as the explanation ‘a
-laugh to make the other feel ashamed,’ ‘to make another feel small.’ We
-may therefore think of ironic, sarcastic, malicious laughter, or of
-derision and Schadenfreude. ཁྲེལ་གད་རྒྱབ་པ་, to laugh at another, at the
-expense of another, in order to make him ridiculous. This word ཁྲེལ་
-furnishes a very striking test of the present state of Tibetan
-lexicography, the word གདན་ will furnish another.
-
-For words like these a comprehensive collection of authentic
-illustrations is imperative before finer shades and the exact range of
-meanings can be fixed. ངོ་ཚ་, commonly translated as ‘shame,’ a synonym
-for ཁྲེལ་, is a similarly uncertain word. Compare the translations in J.
-and S. Ch. D. of this same sentence: ཁྲེལ་བ་དང་ངོ་ཚ་བ་མེད་, J.: ‘he has no
-shame nor dread’; S. Ch. D.: ‘he has no shame or modesty.’
-
-ཁྲེལ་མེད་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཁྲེལ་གཞུང་མེད་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཁྲེལ་ཡོད་པ་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཁྲེལ་སེམས་ཅན་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཁྲོད་ see གངས་རིའི་ཁྲོད་འདི་ན་ and འབྲོག་.
-
-མཁྱེན་པ་ see མཁྱེན་བརྩེ་.
-
-མཁྱེན་བརྩེ་, 55. J.’s queried མཁྱེན་བརྩེ་, quoted from Gyal-rabs: ‘prob.:
-omniscient-merciful,’ cannot with any certainty be decided from this
-passage.
-
-Desg. has མཁྱེན་བརྩེ༌ = ཐུགས་རྗེ་ = ‘knowledge of the heart, i.e. pity,
-mercy.’
-
-S. Ch. D. ‘omniscient mercy.’
-
-According to my teachers these are two different words here, knowledge
-and mercy; not a compound. མཁྱེན་པ་ is here hon. form of ཤེས་པ་ to know.
-But a subst. མཁྱེན་ is not recorded in the Dicts. Desg. has a མཁྱེན་པ་ =
-ཤེས་པ་ = རིག་པ་ ‘science, knowledge,’ and S. Ch. D. also gives མཁྱེན་པ་ as
-‘knowledge.’ In compounds མཁྱེན་ has usually the verbal value of
-‘knowing.’ The entries s.v. མཁྱེན་ in the Dicts. need careful comparison
-and deserve close study.
-
-མཁྱེན་པ་ is often used in an emphatic sense, to know all, to know through
-and through, to know with supernatural knowledge (as, for instance, to
-know what happens from a distance), cf. the English adj. ‘knowing.’
-
-The shades of meaning: wise, learned, intelligent, sensible, careful,
-cautious, clever, need further analysis.
-
-འཁྲུག་པ་, 35. The value of this word is clear from the Dicts., but there
-is a difficulty in choosing suitable English words to fit each case in
-rendering. Such words as the following may be found useful under
-various circumstances: to be disturbed, upset, disordered (cf.
-disordered brain), unbalanced, deranged, convulsed, in turmoil,
-tumultuous (a soul in tumult), in revolt, turbulent, wild, seething, in
-uproar, in the throes of (passion, etc.).
-
-And even so none of the above expressions furnishes an easy, idiomatic
-and close rendering for རྒྱུད་ཁོང་ནས་འཁྲུགས་པའི་མི་, the man whose very
-character is an utter chaos.
-
-འཁུར་བ་, 21. Ordinarily to carry, but here to carry back, i.e. to repay,
-render, return.
-
-Example: ཕ་མའི་དྲིན་འཁུར་དགོས་, You must render your parents their kindness.
-The verb འཇལ་བ་, primarily ‘to weigh’, is equally so used; see J. s.v.
-4. For the above example the word ལན་ would ordinarily be inserted, ཕ་
-མའི་དྲིན་ལན་འཁུར་དགོས་, but this would lessen the force of the illustration
-for our purpose as ལན་ means here ‘return,’ and དྲིན་ལན༌, ‘a kindness in
-return.’ The above sentence can be expressed in three ways: ཕ་མའི་དྲིན་
-(with or without ལན་), འཁུར་ (or འཇལ་, or ལོག་), དགོས་.
-
-གངས་རི་མ་, title. Mother Snow Mountain. The affixes to རི་ are according
-to J. བོ་ and ག་; Desg. adds ངོ་; S. Ch. D. only བོ་; Bell and Henderson
-no affix. Of these བོ་ gives a definite sense of greatness to the
-mountain. (See S. Ch. D., Grammar, Introduction, p. 18). Here the
-particle མ་ is not an inherent part of the substantive, but is added to
-give a feminine sense to the word, which here means something like
-‘Mother Mountain,’ the big mountain being as it were the mother of all
-smaller hills and heights around it. My informants were definitely of
-opinion that, here, ‘Mother Mountain’ and not ‘Lady Mountain’ was
-meant. So we should not understand the expression as ‘Her Majesty or
-Ladyship the Snow Mountain.’ The meaning though grammatically important
-remains better neglected in the translation.
-
-གངས་རིའི་ཁྲོད་འདི་ན་, 25. In this snow-mountain-mass, i.e. monastery. རི་ཁྲོད་
-as monastery in J. s.v. རི་ but not s.v. ཁྲོད་. Bell has རི་ཁྲོད་ as ‘cell
-(of hermit).’
-
-Here the expression seems rather to indicate Gendundub’s own monastery
-(be it Daipung, Tashilhunpo or Namgyalchöde) than Galdan, spoken of in
-the second verse. See Schulemann, Gesch. der Dalailamas, pp. 92 fll.
-See འབྲོག་ and ཤར་.
-
-གོ་ལག་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-གོལ་ས་, 33. J. འགོལ་ས་, error, mistake. In Desg. འགོལ་ས་ or འགོལ་བའི་གནས་,
-solitary spot (s.v. འགོལ་) and ལམ་གོལ་ (s.v. གོལ་), ‘has lost his way’;
-and also འགོལ་སར་གནས་སུ་ to put apart; འགོལ་ལམ་, a separate road, a side
-road (route détournée). According to Desg. only the past form of འགོལ་
-བ་, i.e. གོལ་བ་, means to have erred, gone astray, both physically and
-morally. S. Ch. D. copies J., but adds to J.’s འགོལ་ས་, the place where
-two roads separate: ‘so as to create doubt in the mind regarding the
-right path.’ Schroeter (p. 451a) has two entries འགོལ་བ་, ‘remote,’ and
-འགོལ་བའི་གནས་, ‘a closet.’ J. has the latter expression as ‘a hermitage,’
-and Desg., as above, ‘solitary spot.’ In our passage ལམ་གོལ་ས་ does not
-mean ‘the mistake as to the road,’ or Anglice ‘the error of his ways.’
-
-In our passage ལམ་གོལ་ has to be taken together in the sense of ལོག་ལམ་ =
-ལམ་ལོག་ = ལམ་ངན་, the wrong road (in a religious sense, in contrast to
-the ལམ་མཐོན་པོ་ of l. 31). ལམ་གོལ་ས་ is here to be understood as a
-‘wrong-road-place,’ as the spot or place (ས་ = ས་ཆ་) which is, or
-proves to be, the wrong road, i.e. the place where one realizes that
-the road on which one is, is the wrong road, or, perhaps better, that
-the road is a wrong road (= place) to be in, a wrong-road-spot, indeed.
-
-The meanings, recorded in the Dicts. for compounds with or without
-initial འ་ of འགོལ་བ་, seem logical, as one who has separated himself
-from the road, is astray, is mistaken, is (in moral or intellectual
-matters) in the wrong, in error.
-
-Note this example of the use of the verb: ལན་རིག་པ་བསྒྲིམས་ནས་རྒྱབ་མ་གཏོགས་
-འགོལ་ཡོང་ངོ་, answer very carefully otherwise you will make a mistake.
-
-[རིག་པ་བསྒྲིམས་ནས་, ‘having twisted, squeezed, screwed up your brains??’ =
-adv., carefully, attentively.]
-
-གོས་ལག་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-གླུ་ see མགུར་མ་.
-
-གླུད་, 40. Ransom. Is here rather གླུད་ཚབ་, well defined by S. Ch. D., s.v.
-The meaning of གླུད་ཚབ་ is probably ‘the ransom (which is thrown to the
-evil spirit) as a substitute for, representative of (the person on
-whose behalf the offering is made),’ J.’s མི་གླུད་ ‘a man’s image which in
-his stead is cast away in the གཏོར་མ༌,’ a ransom in effigy. There are,
-however, uses of གླུད་ in which the primary sense is perhaps rather
-‘effigy’ than ‘ransom.’ In a ritual describing the construction of the
-torma cake it is said that the སྐུ་གླུད་ (together with many other moulds)
-must be imprinted on the dough or paste. Here the word seems to mean no
-more than ‘a mould constituting an effigy of the body.’ Though all the
-torma-cake material is thrown away after it has served its purpose,
-these imprinted effigies do not seem to serve specially as ransoms like
-the གླུད་ཚབ་ and མི་གླུད་ quoted above.
-
-As to J.’s queried ཁོ་མི་གླུད་ཡིན་ (and the slightly different མི་ཁོ་གླུད་ཡིན་),
-this is explained as follows. The first phrase means: he is a lü in
-human form (a man-lü, cf. werwolf; D. een lü in menschenvorm,
-menschelijke gedaante). མི་ཁོ་ means ‘that man, there (with a pointing
-out by word or finger).’ For instance: that man John, that king ཀོ་ཀོ་.
-‘That man’ alone would be མི་དེ་. But the second phrase would mean: ‘that
-man so-and-so is a very devil.’ J.’s rendering of the first phrase as
-‘he is a curse, an anathema, one deserving to be cursed’ seems too
-strong. Rather ‘an unmitigated nuisance,’ for, though harsh, it may be
-said by a mother of her own child when it is naughty and unruly. The
-sense seems to be ‘devil’ (as may also be applied to children or wicked
-grown-ups in English ‘they are true devils,’ D. ‘een paar baarlijke
-duivels’) and seems to be a case of meaning-shifting from result to
-cause (pale death!), the lü being the ransom thrown to the evil spirit,
-Anglice devil. The association does not seem to be that of
-worthlessness, hatefulness, something good for nothing, only fit to be
-thrown away like a lü.
-
-As to the above King Koko, this is a facetious name applied (something
-like thingumbob) to such Tibetans as ape Chinese manners in dress and
-in other ways. ཀོ་ཀོ་ is said to be a Chinese word for Tib. ཨ་ཇོ་ or ཇོ་ཇོ་,
-elder brother. A Tibetan, strutting about in Darjeeling with Chinese
-cap and coat may hear the sarcasm addressed to him: ཀོ་ཀོ་ལགས་ག་པ་ཕེབས་ཀྱི་
-ཡིན་ནམ་ ‘Well Mr. Chinaman (or John Ch., Uncle Ch.) where are you going
-to?’ (‘Mossioo’ of the mid-Victorian Punch and music hall ditties).
-
-གླུད་ཚབ་ see གླུད་.
-
-དགའ་ལྡན་ see དགེ་ལྡན་.
-
-དགེ་ལྡན་, 6. Clearly printed in both copies, not དགའ་ལྡན་. This name, ‘the
-virtuous,’ seems to refer to the Gelukpa sect, though the monastery
-which is here meant is usually called དགའ་ལྡན་. The relation between the
-two terms is not quite clear. Grünwedel, in his ‘Mythologie des
-Buddhismus,’ etc., p. 72, speaks of ‘das Kloster dGa-ldan oder
-dGe-ldan.’ Günther Schulemann in ‘Die Geschichte der Dalailamas,’ p.
-65, speaks of the ‘Schule, die zuerst dGa-ldan-pa, dann aber
-dGe-ldan-pa oder dGe-lugs-pa, ‘die Tugendsekte’, genannt wurde.’ Modern
-Tibetans seem to know only the name དགའ་ལྡན་ for the famous monastery.
-
-དགྲ་ཉོན་མོངས་, 37. This is an apposition. The enemies, the sins; the
-enemies who are the sins; ‘these enemies of sins’ as in ‘these rascals
-of boys.’ See ཉོན་མོངས་.
-
-མགུར་མ་, title. Its hon. form is གསུང་མགུར་. As a single word the affix མ་
-is required, which may disappear in compounds. Bell gives as meaning of
-མགུར་མ་ ‘religious song,’ Henderson ‘hymn.’
-
-As J. points out, the profane song is གླུ་ and the religious song མགུར་མ་.
-A synonym for གླུ་ is གཞེས་ (not in the three Dicts. but in Bell and
-Henderson s.v. song).
-
-S. Ch. D.’s གླུ་གཞེས་ ‘sportive song’ is not supported by the data in J.
-or Desg., nor by my informants. They take the second part of this
-compound as a misprint for གཞེས་ and hold that གླུ་གཞེས་ is a double-form
-with the meaning of either of its parts: song. The word མགུར་མ་ has one
-honorific form, གསུང་མགུར་. The words གླུ་ and གཞེས་ have each various hon.
-forms: གསུང་གཞེས (recorded in Bell) and གསུང་གླུ་. Desg. has a གསུང་མགུར་,
-pleasant song, but my oral information does not support this special
-meaning.
-
-Note the difference between J. སྐྱིད་གླུ་ (s.v. སྐྱིད་), ‘song of joy,’ and
-Desg. id. s.v. གླུ་ ‘chant érotique.’
-
-In Redslob’s translation of the Psalms into classical Tibetan, the word
-གསུང་མགུར་ is used for psalm.
-
-The following table may be useful.
-
-
- Ordinary མགུར་མ་ = hon. གསུང་མགུར་
-
- { མགུལ་གླུ་
- ,, གླུ་ = ,, { བཞེས་ (sic.) གླུ་ (??)
- { གསུང་གླུ་
-
- ,, གཞེས་ = ,, { གསུང་གཞེས་
- { མགུལ་གཞེས་ (rare) ??
-
-
-འགོལ་བ་ see གོལ་ས་.
-
-འགོལ་ས་ see གོལ་ས་.
-
-འགྱེ་བ་ and འགྱེད་པ་, 38. Attention must be drawn to the fact that Desg.
-identifies འགྱེད་པ་ with འགྱེ་བ་ as against J.’s distinction between the
-two forms as neutral and active. Also that Desg.’s explanation of གཡུལ་
-འགྱེད་ etc., as ‘to put (the enemy) to flight in battle,’ seems more
-probable than J.’s ‘to fight a battle,’ etc. The explanation of འགྱེད་པ་,
-by འཕམ་ in the note on གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་, q.v., seems to support this
-supposition. S. Ch. D. gives as a meaning of འགྱེད་པ་ ‘to institute, set
-going’ and translates accordingly འཐབ་མོ་འགྱེད་པ་ as ‘to start a combat,’
-as against J. ‘to combat’ alone. Also གཡུལ་འགྱེད་པ་པོ་ ‘one who gives
-battle.’ Desg. s.v. གཡུལ་ (p. 923): གཡུལ་འཐབ་ or གཡུལ་འགྱེད་ ‘to fight in
-battle, to combat.’ Cf. also J. s.v. གཡུལ་. S. Ch. D. copies J. as
-against Desg. གཡུལ་འགྱེད་པ་, ‘to fight a battle.’ These words འགྱེ་བ་ and
-འགྱེད་པ་, again, need further investigation supported by quotations (as
-well as the word གཡུལ་ with which they are used).
-
-རྒ་བ་, 33. To be old, the state of being old, old age. Example སྐེ་རྒ་ན་
-འཆིའི་སྡུག་བསྔལ་ཡོད་, ‘the being born, growing old, being ill, dying are
-sorrows,’ or ‘birth, old age, illness and death are sorrowful.’ Cf. the
-treatment of the first four words in J. རྒས་པའི་, with following verb, to
-be translated as ‘of old age,’ literally: of (belonging to, attendant
-on) having become old; for instance, the joys, sorrows, etc., of the
-state of having become old (of old age) = རྒས་པའི་སྐྱིད་པོ་ (or སྡུག་པོ་). This
-is not the subst. རྒས་ or རྒས་པོ་ of Desg. J. treats རྒ་བ་ as a verb with
-རྒས་ as a past tense, taking རྒད་པ་ and རྒན་པ་ as adjectives from which
-the usual substantives in པོ་, མོ་, etc., are made. Desg. gives the four
-forms རྒ་, རྒད་, རྒན་ and རྒས་ as substantives and has no verb ‘to be old.’
-J.’s analysis seems the more accurate one. J.’s རྒས་ཀ་ ‘old age’ is
-absent in Desg., whilst this latter has a རྒས་ without affix as ‘old
-man,’ ‘old age.’ This word S. Ch. D. has as = རྒ་བ་ ‘old, ripe’; whilst
-he adds རྒས་པ་ = རྒད་པོ་ ‘aged, old; exhausted, infirm; an old man.’ This
-group needs proper quotations for final settlement.
-
-My oral information on some of these points is as follows: The use of
-རྒས་ alone, as ‘old, ripe’ is denied. རྒས་པ་ does not mean རྒད་པོ་ ‘old,’
-because རྒས་པ་ requires a ལོ་ ‘grown old in years’ in that sense. As an
-independent adjective, however, it means ‘worn out, exhausted, thin,
-lean, aged, grown older,’ and is in that case an equivalent for རྒད་པོ་.
-Troubles make a man རྒས་པ་ ‘age him’; make him as if old. Age makes a
-man རྒད་པོ་, old, i.e. really old. For the use of རྒས་ཀ་ the following two
-illustrations were given: རྒས་ཀའི་དུས་ལ་ལས་འདི་འདྲ་མ་བྱེད་ ‘don’t do such work
-(or things: or don’t behave in that manner) in your old age;’ རྒས་ཀ་ཤི་
-བའི་དུས་ལ་བསམ་བློ་ངན་པ་མ་ཐོང་, ‘don’t think bad (evil) thoughts in your old
-age when (whilst) death is drawing near.’
-
-རྒད་, རྒན་, རྒས་ see རྒ་བ་.
-
-རྒྱ་ (or རྒྱལ་) སྒོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-རྒྱན་མཁན་པོ་ see རྒྱན་པ་.
-
-རྒྱན་ཆ་ see རྒྱན་པ་.
-
-རྒྱན་རྣམས་ see རྒྱན་པ་.
-
-རྒྱན་པ་ and བརྒྱན་པ་, 54. The treatment of these words in the Dicts. seems
-unsatisfactory. None of the Dicts. give a passive verb རྒྱན་པ་ or བརྒྱན་པ་
-‘being adorned, being decked out, embellished,’ etc. J. has only རྒྱན་ as
-a subst. ‘ornament, decoration,’ and a verb བརྒྱན་པ་ ‘to adorn, decorate,
-provide with.’ According to this his own example ཉ་མགོ་ས་ཡིས་བརྒྱན་པ་
-should not mean, as he says, ‘the letter nya (ཉ་) being provided with
-an S above it’ (= སྙ་), but rather something like ‘to adorn the letter
-nya with a sa as a topletter.’
-
-Desg. knows a verb རྒྱན་པ་ or རྒྱན་རྒྱབ་ (or བྱེད་ or བཀོད་) with the meaning of
-‘to adorn,’ with a past tense བརྒྱན་, ‘ornavi, ornatus, orné,’ whatever
-that means. He and J. quote also a རྒྱན་གྱིས་བརྒྱན་པ་ ‘adorned,’ in which the
-རྒྱན་ has clearly a substantival value, like in རྒྱན་མེད་པ་, ‘without
-adornment, unadorned.’
-
-S.v. བརྒྱན་ Desg. says: ‘praet. verbi རྒྱན་པར་, ornatus, et v. act. ornare,
-orné, orner,’ and he adds བརྒྱན་པ་ or ཆ་ ‘ornament.’ Bell has རྒྱན་ཆ་ for
-ornament. But J. knows no བརྒྱན་པ་ or ཆ་ as substantives and refers
-expressly to the unprefixed རྒྱན་ for the substantives. He further
-equates རྒྱན་ཆ་ and རྒྱན་རྣམས་ ‘ornaments’ (plural). Under འདོགས་པ་, ‘to put
-on,’ we find further རྒྱན་འདོགས་པ་, to put on gay clothes, finery (s.v.
-རྒྱན་, the same expression is translated as ‘to adorn one’s self,’) and
-རྒྱན་བཟང་པོ་བཏགས་པ་, ‘beautifully attired’ (Mil.). If these translations
-are idiomatically true we should expect (བ) རྐྱན་ to have a wider sense
-than the English ornament, rather anything beautiful or fine, whether
-ornaments (in the sense of trinkets) or not. The word adornment would
-fit better. (Cf. D. tooi, G. Schmuck.)
-
-Desg. gives no example of རྒྱན་པ་ with a clearly active value of the verb
-‘to ornament,’ but both in J. and Desg. such examples are given under
-བརྒྱན་པ་. Desg. gives as synonyms ལེགས་བྱེད་ and མཛེས་བྱེད་ and it is a
-question whether in these expressions བྱེད་ can have the neuter sense of
-‘to act as’ = ‘to be’ (like in རྒྱལ་པོ་བྱེད་པ་). S. Ch. D. (who has several
-misprints in his syns. for རྒྱན་) quotes s.v. འགོད་པ་ (292b) a བརྒྱན་དགོད་པ་,
-‘to arrange ornaments (tastefully); to decorate, adorn, to construct or
-adjust grammatical forms, sentences, (Zam.).’ This latter use of བརྒྱན་
-is evidently the clue to the expression, quoted elsewhere by Desg. and
-S. Ch. D.: རྒྱན་མཁན་པོ་, अलंकारपण्डित, one versed in rhetoric, a clever
-orator. The equation རྒྱན་པ་ = བཞག་པ་ (in the modern language, v. Bell,
-to put, place), given by S. Ch. D. is denied by both my teachers,
-though confirmed by Desg.; they know of no Tibetan word of this
-spelling and sound with the meaning bejewelled, adorned, decorated, as
-is the correct translation of the Sk. equivalent cited, मण्डित. Yet may
-རྒྱན་ (པ་) perhaps mean ‘an ornamented object’, hence ‘die, dice’; hence
-again Desg. ‘objets mêlés pour tirer les sorts’, and lastly ‘stake’ (in
-gambling) and ‘lot’? This first meaning is not in the Dicts. but would
-settle the question discussed a few lines lower down, and explain those
-combinations with རྒྱན་ which refer to gambling and divination. In
-connection with the immediately following articles in S. Ch. D., རྒྱན་
-བཞག་མཁན༌, ‘one who joins in a wager, gambler’ [one who puts up his
-jewels, ornaments for a stake?], and རྒྱན་དོར་བ་ or བཞག་པ་, ‘a dice-rogue,
-a gamester, one who throws dice,’ etc., it should be ascertained
-whether there is a Tibetan word with རྒྱན་ which means die, dice, or
-whether the combinations refer to the staking of ornaments and jewels
-in gambling.
-
-S.v. བརྒྱན་པ་ S. Ch. D. gives no news, treating this word, however, as a
-verb, and referring to རྒྱན་ for the subst.
-
-As a result of this little investigation we come to the conclusion that
-it is legitimate to inquire whether there is not a Tibetan verb རྒྱན་པ་
-(more likely than བརྒྱན་པ་) with the passive or neuter sense of ‘being
-decked out, being ornamented or adorned, showing gaily.’ What would
-render such a word exactly in English is difficult to see, unless we
-coin a verb ‘to splendiferate,’ but D. pronken (pronken in vollen
-luister) comes near to it. Other related words would be: to blaze
-forth, to shine out, to cut a dash, or else to swagger, to swank, to
-preen, to strut, or again to be graced with or by, to show forth, etc.,
-but especially ‘to display’ in the technical zoological sense.
-
-An instructive illustration in this matter is furnished by the
-following two sentences, both with the same meaning: ཐང་ཀ་རི་མོས་བརྒྱན་
-འདུག་, or ཐང་ཀ་འདི་ལ་རི་མོས་བརྒྱན་འདུག་, of which the best idiomatic
-translation is: O, what a fine picture!; how fine is the painting
-(drawing) of (in) (this) picture!
-
-But the psychological translation is in the first case: ‘This picture
-is by-lines-(fine)-displaying’, and in the second case: ‘To this
-picture there is a by-the-lines-(drawings)-ornamentation (or display).’
-
-རྒྱལ་སྒོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-རྒྱལ་བ་, 6. According to J., III, also ‘superior, excellent, eminent.’
-རྣམ་པར་རྒྱལ་བ་, ‘most excellent, illustrious.’ This may be the meaning
-here. Whether there is a connection between the word as used here and
-the རྒྱལ་བ་ title of the Dalai Lamas may be left undecided.
-
-རྒྱུད་, 30. Here character, heart, disposition, etc. It is curious that
-this meaning, given by J. and Desg., is absent in S. Ch. D.
-
-སྒོ་, 39, 40. Door. Though the average Tibetan house (if it be not a mere
-hut) has two doors, a front door and a back door, they are not on a
-principle located in the eastern and western sides of the house. For
-the text the words east and west have no special significance; they are
-simply used དཔེ་འདྲ་པོ་, by way of speech, as an example, illustration or
-comparison.
-
-The front (main, public) door is called གཞུང་སྒོ་ or རྒྱ་ (or རྒྱལ་) སྒོ་. The
-first word is interpreted as the ‘main,’ ‘public,’ or ‘middle’ door;
-the second as the ‘wide’ or ‘royal’ door. The back door is called ལྟག་སྒོ་
-(in J. s.v. ལྟག་པ་), which is explained as ‘the door for horses and
-cattle.’ The སྐྱེད་སྒོ་ quoted by J., p. 29b, is unknown to my informants.
-They only know a སྐྱེ་སྒོ་, ‘the door leading to birth, or re-birth.’
-
-སྒོ་གསུམ་ see གསུང་.
-
-སྒྲིམ་པ་ see གོལ་ས་.
-
-བརྒྱན་པ་ see རྒྱན་པ་.
-
-ངེས་པར་ (དུ་) see ཅིས་ཀྱང་ and ངེས་སོ་.
-
-ངེས་སོ་, 16. With terminative: ‘there is certainty for’ = ‘it is certain’
-= ‘I am sure of’, ‘I know for certain that’, ‘it is surely, truly so.’
-A has ངས་ for ངེས་ in B.
-
-Here, however, ངེས་སོ་ = ངེས་པར་ = ངེས་པར་དུ་ = ངོ་ཐོག་ = ངོན་ནས་ = ‘indeed,
-truly, really, forsooth.’ Compare also ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-ངོ་ཆོད་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-ངོ་རྟོག་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-ངོ་ཐོག་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་ and ངེས་སོ་.
-
-ངོ་མ་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-ངོ་མོ་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-ངོ་ཚ་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-དངོས་ནས་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-མངོན་པར་རྟོགས་པ་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-ཅི་མྱུར་ see མྱུར་.
-
-ཅིས་ཀྱང་, 48. (Also ཅིས་ནས་ཀྱང་). Here rather with the meaning ‘without
-fail, for sure, indeed, surely’ in addition to J.’s ‘anyhow, by all
-means.’ It is said to be synonymous with ངེས་པར་དུ་ and colloquial ངོ་ཐོག་,
-as, for instance, in: ངོ་ཐོག་ཕེབ་རོགས་གནང་, ‘I ask (you) to come without
-fail, indeed, surely, for sure, so that I may count on it.’ Also རྟེན་
-ལྡན་. Cf. Desg. in addition to J.—J. (p. 129b) has the spelling ངོ་རྟོག་.
-Bell s.v. ‘certainly’ ངོ་ཐོག་ (syn. རྟེན་ལྡན་); s.v. ‘indeed’ (syn. རྟེན་རྟེན་);
-s.v. ‘surely’ ངེས་པར་; s.v. ‘actual’ ངོ་ཐོག་; s.v. ‘real’ ངོ་ཐོག་ (syn. དངོས་
-ནས་); s.v. ‘really’ ངེས་པར་. Desg. ངོ་ཐོག་ཡིན་ ‘natural, not manufactured,’
-but ངོ་ཐོག་ (next article) ‘certitude’ = ངོ་མ་, ངོ་མོ་ or ངོ་ཆོད་. S. Ch. D.
-ངོ་ཐོག་ ‘true, genuine, really.’ རྟེན་ལྡན་ and རྟེན་རྟེན་ are not in the Dicts.
-ངོ་མོ་ and ངོ་ཆོད་ are not endorsed by my authorities. See also ངེས་སོ་.
-
-ཅེས་པ་, colophon. According to J. = ཅེས་སྨྲས་པ་, ‘that which has been
-spoken,’ i.e. ‘speech, word,’ etc. Corresponds very closely to D. ‘het
-gesprokene, het gezegde’ or L. ‘dictum.’ Here, however, the meaning may
-be extended to ‘piece of writing’ (D. ‘het geschrevene,’ L. ‘scriptum’)
-or perhaps even more generally ‘the above, the foregoing.’
-
-The other use of the expression, as an abbreviation for ཅེས་བྱ་བ་, ‘the
-so-called,’ is here, of course, not applicable.
-
-གཅིག་པུ་ (or པོ་) see དྭངས་མར་.
-
-ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ལྕགས་ནག་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ལྕགས་རི་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ཆགས་སྡང་, 22. In J. ‘love and hatred,’ but here better ‘attraction (for
-the pleasant) and repulsion (for the unpleasant),’ in other words:
-‘non-attachment (to weal and woe), indifference (to the ups and downs
-of life),’ or again ‘bondage’ (to emotions, impressions, etc.). S. Ch.
-D. has ‘passion for, passionate attachment.’ It is the German ‘Lust und
-Unlust.’
-
-ཆུ་གཏེར་ see གཏེར་.
-
-ཆུ་པ་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-ཆོ་པ་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབྱིངས་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-ཆོས་ཚུལ་བཞིན་, 34. To be construed: ཆོས་ + ཚུལ་བཞིན་ (པ་ or དུ་), and not as
-ཆོས་ཚུལ་ + བཞིན་, etc.
-
-ཆོས་མཛད་ (མཁན་), 43. Here most likely in the stricter sense those who
-have devoted, given, themselves (entirely) to the religious life, i.e.
-those who have entered the order, the དགེ་སློང་ or even གྲྭ་པ་, learners,
-pupils, lay-brothers. Cf. however, J. s.v. ཆོས་བྱེད་པ་, p. 163a, and Desg.
-who has a subst. ཆོས་མཛད་, ‘lamaist dignity, rank,’ p. 333b.
-
-ཆོས་ཟབ་, 10. Stands here for ཟབ་པའི་ཆོས་, or ཆོས་ཟབ་མོ་, ‘the deep,
-profound, doctrine, teaching, religion.’ Perhaps an allusion to the ཟབ་
-ལམ་, the ‘profound doctrine of Buddhism as explained in the Tantras’
-(S. Ch. D. s.v. ཟབ་ལམ་). J. renders it ‘a term of Buddhist mysticism,
-doctrine of witchcraft,’ whilst Desg. translates the term as ‘doctrina
-magica.’ ཆོས་ཟབ་ instead of ཟབ་ཆོས་ perhaps for metrical reasons; in
-ordinary speech the inversion seems not usual. See also ཟབ་པ་.
-
-ཆོས་སེམས་ཅན་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-མཆོད་གདན་ see གདན་.
-
-འཆང་བ་, 46. ‘To hold, to keep, to stick to, adhere to.’ མ་འཆང་བར་ ‘not
-keeping (it) so, not preserving, maintaining (it) in that (the same)
-state, not letting (it) continue in the same way, not keeping up the
-state of, not persisting in (the same way)’ etc.
-
-Freely translated by its reverse: rectifying, redressing, correcting,
-changing (one’s attitude, condition, action, etc., previously referred
-to).
-
-འཆད་ཉན་པ་ see བཤད་ཉན་.
-
-མཇུག་ see རྗེས་མཇུག་པ་.
-
-འཇུག་ see རྗེས་མཇུག་པ་.
-
-རྗེས་མཇུག་པ་, 45. Not in the Dicts., lit. ‘after-track,’ is here,
-‘followers, pupils, disciples, adherents.’ Though འཇུག་ is sometimes
-used for མཇུག་, see J. 177a, last line, the word རྗེས་འཇུག་, ‘affix, final
-consonant,’ a grammatical term, is of course different, as well as J.’s
-adj. ‘following, coming after.’
-
-The word has also the meaning ‘orphan’ (those left behind). See also
-under ཁོ་བོའི་, etc.
-
-བརྗོད་པ་ see མཚན་བརྗོད་པ་.
-
-ཉ་ཀུག་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ཉོན་མོངས་, 37. Here ‘sin’ or ‘vice’ are to be understood as either the
-three sins, or vices, or failings, or defects, or frailties, ཉོན་མོངས་
-གསུམ, ‘lust, anger and stupidity’ (in the conventional rendering), འདོད་
-ཆགས་, ཞེ་སྡང་, གཏི་མུག་, or the five sins, ཉོན་མོངས་ལྔ་, namely the three
-mentioned above with the addition of ང་རྒྱལ་ ‘pride’ and ཕྲག་དོག་ ‘envy’ as
-fourth and fifth.
-
-See also དགྲ་ཉོན་མོངས་.
-
-མཉེན་ see བཤེས་གཉེན་.
-
-སྙིང་པོ་ see བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་.
-
-སྙིང་རུས་བྱེད་པ་ see བརྩོན་པར་བགྱིད་པ་.
-
-སྙོམས་ལས་འཛིན་པ་, 13. Equals སྙོམས་ལས་བྱེད་ (or དྲན་) པ་ = ‘to be ease-loving,
-indolent, lazy.’
-
-གཏིང་ནས་, 28. ‘From the bottom’ (sc. of the heart), hence expressions
-like སྐྱོ་བ་གཏིང་ནས་སྐྱེས་ may be simply translated ‘a deep pity (or sadness)
-arises, I become very sad, I am very sorry.’ See also སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-གཏེར་, 55. Here perhaps better ‘treasure heap’ than mere ‘treasure,’ or
-perhaps even ‘treasury.’ S. Ch. D. gives as meanings: ‘treasure’ and
-‘store-place,’ in this deviating from J. and Desg. S. Ch. D.’s example
-ཆུ་གཏེར་, ‘the repository of water, the ocean’, seems to prove his
-additional explanation.
-
-རྟག་དཔྱད་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-རྟེན་རྟེན་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-རྟེན་ལྡན་ see ཅིས་ཀྱང་.
-
-རྟེན་པ་, 49. (Pf. and ft. བརྟེན་). Has here simply the primary meaning ‘to
-adhere to,’ more colloquially, ‘to stick to,’ or ‘to keep to, hold fast
-to, to heed, to observe.’ May, however, here be also taken as Desg.’s
-‘to believe in, to trust’ (in the sense of ‘to rely on’) according to
-his example ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་གསུང་ལ་རྟེན་པས་, ‘I believe, trust (in) your words’ (p.
-420a), or otherwise: to put reliance on (what another says, states,
-preaches, teaches).
-
-རྟོག་པ་, 32. (Pf. བརྟགས་). May almost be translated here as ‘to
-contemplate, to consider’ (‘if one comes to think about it’ or ‘if one
-looks into that matter’), but not merely as ‘to behold, to see.’
-
-རྟོག་དཔྱོད་, 47. Evidently the same as J.’s. བརྟགས་དཔྱོད་ ‘examination, trial’
-(214b). J. has a verb བརྟག་དཔྱོད་ (or རྟོག་གཞིག་) གཏོང་བ་, occurring in the
-Padma tʽaṅ yig and in Milaraspa, with the meaning ‘to examine, search
-into, see whether or whether not.’ J. has also the forms རྟོག་དཔྱོད་ and
-བརྟག་དཔྱད་, both subst. ‘examination,’ s.v. དཔྱོད་པ་, ‘to examine,’ p.
-329a.
-
-Desg. gives རྟོག་དཔྱད་ as syn. with རྟོག་པ་, ‘to consider, test, judge’;
-བརྟགས་དཔྱོད་, ‘examination, judgment.’
-
-S. Ch. D. རྟོག་དཔྱོད་ (= བསམ་མནོ་, or མནོ་བསམ་) ‘consideration, examination,
-trial,’ and (558a) བརྟག་དཔྱད་ (= ཞིབ་དཔྱད་), ‘examination, careful weighing
-of all the details of a case, deliberation.’ S. Ch. D. seems to treat
-རྟོག་དཔྱོད་ and བརྟག་དཔྱད་ as two quite different words. S.v. དཔྱོད་པ་ he has
-further རྟོག་དཔྱོད་པ་, ‘to examine anything,’ and བརྟག་དཔྱད་, ‘investigation,
-inquiry.’
-
-རྟོགས་པ་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-ལྟ་བ་ 51. This word seems here to mean ‘vision, illumination, (direct
-mystical) contemplation, the seeing face to face.’ In our passage it is
-the direct vision (the ‘vision direct’), proper to, inherent in,
-characteristic of, belonging to, the knowledge pertaining to the
-actionless (or undifferentiated) state, the
-‘passive-state-knowledge-vision.’ See also སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-ལྟག་སྒོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-ལྟོ་ཆས་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ལྟོ་གདན་ see གདན་.
-
-ལྟོབ་ཆས་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-སྟོང་པ་ཉིད་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-བརྟག་དཔྱད་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-བརྟག་དཔྱོད་གཏོང་བ་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-བརྟགས་དཔྱོད་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-བསྟན་པ་ (གཉིས་) see ལམ་རིམ་.
-
-བསྟན་པ་འཛིན་པ་, 23. ‘To follow, to keep to the teaching; to be or remain
-true, faithful to the teaching, to hold fast to it, to stick to it.’
-See also རྟེན་པ་.
-
-ཐབས་ see འདུལ་ཐབས་.
-
-ཐམས་ཅད་མཁྱེན་པ་ཆེན་པོ་དགེ་འདུན་གྲུབ་དཔལ་བཟང་པོ་, lit.
-‘Great-all-knowing-clergy-perfection-good-glory,’ corresponds to a Sk.
-Mahā-sarva-jña-saṁgha-siddhi-shrī-bhadra. See for literature about him:
-Schulemann, Geschichte der Dalailamas, pp. 91–92, note 11, and S. Ch.
-D.: The Hierarchy of the Dalai Lamas, J.A.S.B., Vol. LXXIII, Pt. I,
-extra No., p. 81.
-
-ཐུགས་ནི་ཟབ་ཡངས་མཁྱེན་བརྩེའི་གཏེར་, 55. This is here, in my opinion, not a sort
-of Hottentottenpotentatentantenattentater-like formation. I take the
-ཟབ་ཡངས་ to refer to the ཐུགས་, a profound and wide mind, whilst the མཁྱེན་
-བརྩེ་ only refers to the གཏེར་, the treasury of omniscient mercy. It is
-not likely that the qualities of width and depth form part of an
-enumeration of which the remaining items are love and knowledge or even
-(as a compound) omniscient-mercy. See the various component words in
-this glossary.
-
-ཐུགས་རྗེ་ see མཁྱེན་བརྩེ་.
-
-ཐུགས་གཟུ་བོ་ see བློ་གཟུ་བོ་.
-
-མཐེབ་ཀྱུ་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-མཐོན་པོ་ see ལམ་མཐོན་པོ་.
-
-འཐབ་མོ་འགྱེད་པ་ see འགྱེ་བ་.
-
-དག་སྣང་, 43. J.’s entry under this entry is as follows: “དག་ (པའི༌) སྣང་
-(བ་) Schr. ‘good opinion’ (?), prob.: a pure, sound view or knowledge
-Glr.; in Mil. it has a similar meaning.” He adds an oral sentence:
-“*dhag-náṅ jón-wa* C. to lead a holy life.” (sic. jón = jóṅ?) Schroeter
-has (135b): “དག་སྣང་, a good opinion, a good conception of any thing, a
-conceit, a thought.” [Based on an Italian ‘concetto’?] He has two
-further entries ‘དག་པའི་སྣང་བ་, to form a good opinion of any
-individual,’ and ‘དག་སྣང་སྤྱོང་ (read: སྦྱོང་) བ་, to form a good opinion, or
-to conceive well of any one.’
-
-In our passage we are inclined to take སྣང་ as སྣང་བ་, as ‘view, thought,
-idea, conception,’ etc., and སྦྱོང་བ་ = ‘to exercise, practise, perform’,
-or even ‘to entertain, cherish (thoughts).’ དག་ we take as དག་པ་,
-‘pure’—the connection with thought not the opposite of false,
-erroneous, but of bad, cruel, unkind. So here the expression seems to
-mean ‘to think with goodwill, with kindness (of others),’ not the
-colloquial ‘to have a good opinion of, to think well of.’ To think
-‘good’ is here the opposite of to think ‘evil,’ but the idiomatic value
-of the expression ‘to think well of’ (as the opposite of ‘to think
-poorly of’) would make the latter rendering misleading. The real value,
-then, of the expression as used in this passage, seems to be: ‘to think
-good, kind thoughts of,’ i.e. purely, or saintly in the sense of
-kindly, lovingly, benevolently, in a friendly manner, with sympathy,
-but not, as J. seems to suggest, intellectually correct. We may expand
-the rendering into ‘with a holy mind, with thoughts of saintliness,
-thinking saintly thoughts.’ Compare J.’s colloquial phrase quoted
-above. So, as to the interpretation of the line in which the compound
-occurs, we take it that it means to enjoin, in contrast with the
-previous line in which it is said that beings in general must be
-thought of with kindness, that religious people (instead of the mere
-laymen) must be thought of in a still better, higher manner, namely
-with holiness and saintliness.
-
-One of my informants was first inclined to take དག་སྣང་སྦྱོང་བ་ as ‘to
-teach, to preach the true knowledge.’ Though he later on sided with the
-explanation adopted above, the opinion should be recorded, but it
-should be added that a second informant rejected this view of the first
-one.
-
-Attention should be drawn to the meaning of སྣང་དག་, ‘the soul’ (with
-spellings སྣང་ and ནང་; དག་, རྟགས་, བརྟག་, སྟག་, s. J.). Also the curious
-expression ‘to be indifferent’ སྣང་དག་མ་བཏང་བ་, S. Ch. D.; and སྣང་དག་མི་
-བྱེད་པ་, Bell. These expressions not in Desg.
-
-དག་སྣང་སྦྱོང་བ་ see དག་སྣང་.
-
-དང་པོ་ see དཔེ་.
-
-དྭངས་མར་, 27. Adverb: ‘purely, first class, first rate.’ Not in J. but
-in Desg., yet here in a slightly different application. About S. Ch.
-D.’s ‘gravy’ and ‘relish’ see below. དྭངས་མ་ with the genitive seems to
-mean ‘acme’, ‘essence’, the typical embodiment of something, like in
-expressions as ‘a first class liar, a thief pure and simple, the very
-devil, satan himself, nothing short of an angel, a saint in propria
-persona.’ དགྲ་བོའི་དྭངས་མ་, ‘the very enemy.’ In the colloquial དྭངས་མ་, ཡང་
-རྩེ་ and ཨང་གི་དང་པོ་ may have the same meaning. The latter is something
-like pidgin-English ‘number one’ or the kitchen Malay equivalent
-‘nommer satu.’ Other equations are གཅིག་པོ་ (or པུ་), also རང་, the
-Anglo-Indian ‘pukka.’
-
-The word དྭངས་ may mean soup or gravy in the following case, when there
-is question of singling out the liquid portion from a mixture of broth
-and liquid. The primary meaning seems in that case rather to be liquid
-as contrasted to solid. ང་ལ་དྭངས་བླུགས་རོགས་གནང་ = give me (only) the
-liquid (not the solid stuff), pour out to me (only) the liquid. But
-this དྭངས་ has no final མ་. A common word for soup which is not in the
-Dicts. is ‘rü thang’, probably རུས་ཐང་, or ཐང་ alone. This latter word
-is in J. with the meaning of ‘potion’, a medical term, and in S. Ch. D.
-as ‘potion, plain decoction, or mixture to be drunk after a medicinal
-pill has been taken.’ The word རུས་ཐང་ means originally bone-soup, but
-has acquired also the more general meaning ‘soup.’ ཐང་ can be applied
-to meat-soup, ཤ་ཁུ་, but ཤ་ཐང་ cannot be used. It might be that ཐང་ and
-དྭངས་ are really the same word.
-
-དད་པ་སྐྱེས་ see སྐྱེ་བ་.
-
-དམ་པོ་, 30. Might here, in connection with ambition, be translated as
-‘fierce,’ an extension of its primary meaning ‘strong.’
-
-དུག་པོ་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-དུག་ལོག་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-དུགས་པོ་ see སྐྱོ་བ་.
-
-དུས་ནམ་ཡང་, 24. For ever, always.
-
-དུས་མྱུར་བ་ see མྱུར་.
-
-དོན་ཆུང་ཆུང་ see དོན་རེ་ཆུང་.
-
-དོན་རེ་ཆུང་, 40. ‘Exceedingly stupid, meaningless, useless, silly,
-senseless.’ The particle རེ་ has an emphatic value, but it is difficult
-to define its precise scope in English. Oral information is vague on
-the subject, and seems to point towards a possibility that the རེ་ is a
-syllable of exclamation or turns the expression, of which it forms
-part, into an exclamation. དོན་རེ་ཆུང་. ‘Oh, how silly!’ An equivalent is
-དོན་ཆུང་ཆུང་ཡིན་ = དོན་མེད་. དོན་ཆུང་ alone is not used, and དོན་ཆུང་ཆུང་ demands
-a final རེད་ or ཡིན་.
-
-S. Ch. D. (502a) translates ཁྱོད་བོད་རྣམས་སྙིང་རེ་རྗེ་ as: ‘I pity you, ye
-Tibetans’; perhaps better ‘What a pity, O ye Tibetans.’ Compare the
-list of words with wedged-in རེ་ in J. s.v. རེ་ p. 533b.
-
-དྲིན་ཆེ་བ་, 16. Also དྲིན་ཆེན་, adjective ‘kind.’ According to S. Ch. D. also
-‘very kind, great boon, and the great or greatest benefactor.’ S. Ch.
-D.’s wording is unsatisfactorily indefinite and his examples, taken
-from J., fit the text badly. J. does not define the combination དྲིན་ཆེ་བ་
-though he has an example བཀའ་དྲིན་ཆེ་བ་ with the meaning ‘greatest
-benefit.’ Two colloquial examples are: དྲིན་ཆེ་བའི་ཡབ་ཡུམ་གཉིས་, ‘the two
-(very) kind parents,’ and མི་འདི་དྲིན་ཆེན་ཡིན་, that man is (very) kind.
-
-In form དྲིན་ཆེ་བ་ is a comparative, ‘kinder.’ ཆེན་པོ་ is one of those
-adjectives which have a comparative and superlative of their own as:
-
-
- Great. Many. Good. Small. Bad.
-positive ཆེན་པོ་ མང་པོ་ ཡག་པོ་ ཆུང་ཆུང་ སྡུག་པོ་
-comparative ཆེ་བ་ མང་བ་ (or ང་) ཡག་ག་ ཆུང་ང་ སྡུག་ག་
-superlative ཆེ་ཤོས་ མང་ཤོས་ ཡག་ཤོས་ ཆུང་ཤོས་ སྡུག་ཤོས་
-
-
-In practice, however, as shown by the above examples, the form is used
-for an ordinary quality in the positive degree though implying an
-amount of abundance or fullness of the quality referred to. Bell (p.
-33) and Hannah (p. 129) have described these degrees of comparison.
-Short and partial notes in S. Ch. D.’s grammar (p. 31) and Henderson
-(p. 23). See J. Dict. s.v. ཤོས་, p. 564. དྲིན་ཆེ, J. 262b (as equal to དྲིན་
-ཅན་) is not acknowledged by my informants.
-
-དྲིན་ཆེ་ is objected to by my teachers because they say it never occurs
-alone but requires a final བ་, except in the superlative form དྲིན་ཆེ་ཤོས་
-which, of course, is another thing. See, however, S. Ch. D. བཀའ་དྲིན་ཆེ་,
-p. 654, J. p. 13. As to the ཆེན་ or ཆེན་པོ་ in many Tibetan adjectives,
-this is better regarded as an enclitic particle, exactly corresponding
-to the English termination -ful. As little as the English -ful really
-means ‘full’, does the Tibetan ཆེན་ (པོ་) as a termination of adjectives
-really mean ‘great.’
-
-Bell has དྲིན་ཆེན་པོ་ for ‘kind.’
-
-The word དྲིན་ལན་ and its uses merit a separate inquiry. In this place we
-shall limit ourselves to stating that the entry gratitude (S. Ch. D.,
-Ramsay, Schroeter) seems incorrect. The confusion has most likely come
-about because a དྲིན་ལན་ is an answer to kindness (return gift, etc.) and
-so betokens gratitude.
-
-དྲིན་ཆེན་ (པོ་) see དྲིན་ཆེ་བ་.
-
-དྲིན་ཇི་བཞིན་, 21. Ellipse for: according to (or, in the measure of)
-whatever kindness (you have shown to me).
-
-དྲིན་ལན་ see དྲིན་ཆེ་བ་.
-
-དྲུང་འཁོར་ see བརྩེ་.
-
-གདན་ see བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་.
-
-གདུག་པ་, 35. The three Dicts. are not at one as to the exact shades of
-meaning of གདུག་པ་.
-
-J. has, subst.: ‘anything hurtful, or any injury, mischief, harm,
-done.’
-
-Desg., subst.: ‘dommage, perte, mal.’
-
-S. Ch. D. no substantive.
-
-J., adj. (= གདུག་པ་ཅན༌), ‘noxious, mischievous, dangerous.’ Desg., adj.
-only གདུག་པ་ཅན་, not གདུག་པ་ alone: nuisible (noxious), and a གདུག་ =
-གདོག་, deteriorated.
-
-S. Ch. D., adj.: གདུག་པོ་, vicious, mischievous, deleterious, poisonous.
-
-In J. and S. Ch. D. further applied meanings as: wild, hideous
-(screams); ferocity (in beasts), deleterious (smell), fierce (woman).
-
-In our passage the expression གདུག་སེམས་ཅན་ may be rendered by malign,
-wicked, evil, evil-minded, spiteful, with sufficient correctness.
-
-གདུག་པ་ཅན་ see གདུག་པ་.
-
-གདུག་པོ་ see གདུག་པ་.
-
-གདུག་སེམས་ཅན་ see གདུག་པ་.
-
-གདུང་བ་ see གདུང་དབྱངས་.
-
-གདུང་དབྱངས་, Colophon. J. renders this word as ‘a song expressive of
-longing or of grief, an elegy (Mil.)’; but this definition is not quite
-typical of our present poem. S. Ch. D. has ‘a song of longing grief.’
-J.’s example མོས་གུས་གདུང་བ་དཔག་མེད་སྐྱེ་, where གདུང་བ་ means (spiritual)
-love, seems to point out to a meaning more apposite here. So we would
-prefer a translation: paean, hymn of praise (D. lofzang), or psalm
-instead of elegy. Other words to be considered: song of thanksgiving,
-memorial song, lament, plaintive song (jammerklacht?), memorial verses,
-an in memoriam, a memorial, etc. See also དབྱངས་.
-
-The dge rgan, however, explains the word indeed in J.’s manner, but
-states that the longing and grief are not the worldly sentiments but
-religious ones. The longing and grief are concerned with the sorrows of
-the world and a yearning after spiritual realities, but not with the
-memory of the three teachers mentioned in the poem. If this is true,
-the above hypothesis is likely to be a wrong one and in my translation
-of the colophon the words there used should in that case rather run ‘as
-a song of yearning for the higher life’ (cf. the G. ‘Weltschmerz’).
-
-གདོག་ see གདུག་པ་.
-
-འདུལ་ཐབས་, 37. Steps, measures, to subdue or tame, etc. འདུལ་ཐབས་བྱེད་པ་,
-to take such measures.
-
-འདོགས་པ་ see རྒྱན་པ་.
-
-འདྲེན་པ, 20. (Fut. དྲང་). If the ལྕགས་ཀྱུ་ (see ཀྱུ་) is here to be thought of
-as a goad (like the one of the mahout) then the verb should be
-understood as sub J. 2, ‘to conduct, lead, guide’ (by prodding). My
-teachers take it as ‘to draw,’ or ‘pull.’ Pictorial representations
-might decide the point. My teachers think rather of a rod with a hook
-at the end, like the episcopal staff, and not of angling with a
-fishhook or prodding with a goad.
-
-སྡུག་ཡུས་, 33. Or simply ཡུས་, here: ‘the loss of temper, wrath, angry
-explosion or outburst.’ This sense is not given in the Dicts., though
-J.’s 4, ‘ardour, fervour, transport’ comes near it. སྡུག་ཡུས་ is the same
-as ཡུས་, but for the fact that the former word shows the cause, an
-outburst on account of trouble, vexation, worry, pain, sorrow. (སྡུག་)
-ཡུས་བཤད་ (སྟོན་ or བྱེད་) པ་ = to show (or to lose) one’s temper, to flare
-up, to burst out, to break loose, to explode in anger, wrath. ཕ་མ་ལ་སྡུག་
-ཡུས་མ་བཤད་, ‘don’t show temper to your parents.’ དཔོན་ལ་ཡུས་མ་བཤད་, ‘don’t
-lose your temper before (or with) the master.’ དེ་རིང་ཁོས་ང་ལ་ཡུས་མང་པོ་བསྟན་
-སོང་, ‘to-day he has entirely lost his temper before (or to) me.’ It is
-synonymous, in this sense, with the word འུ་ཐུག་ which is also dealt with
-inadequately in the Dicts. q.v. མི་སུ་ལ་ཡང་འུ་ཐུག་མ་སྟོན་, ‘don’t lose your
-temper to anyone, to whomsoever.’ ཁྱོད་ཀྱིས་འུ་ཐུག་བཤད་དགོས་པའི་དོན་མེད་, ‘there
-is no reason (no need, or it is senseless) to lose your temper.’ (Cf.
-D. uitvallen, uitvaren, uitvoeteren, opstuiven, uitbarsten.)
-
-གནམ་ལ་སྙེག་འདྲ་བ་, 2. Either ‘as if rising towards the sky,’ in which case
-འདྲ་བ་ refers to all the previous words, or: as if rising whilst in the
-sky, in which case the འདྲ་བ་ would only refer to སྙེག་པ་.
-
-གནས་པ་ see བློ་གཟུ་བོ་.
-
-མནོ་བསམ་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-རྣལ་འབྱོར་སོགས་, 9. I have not received an explanation of the ‘etc.’ (སོགས་)
-in this place and I ignore what kind of category is alluded to here. It
-seems not probable that the ’18 classes of science’ can be meant,
-which, in the Mahāvyutpatti (Ed. M.A.S.B.), form group XXIV, p. 20.
-Group L, (p. 59), furnishes more likely material, but Yoga is missing
-in it.
-
-སྣང་དག་ see དག་སྣང་.
-
-དཔལ་ལྡན་, 56. ‘Glorious, noble,’ also ‘having abundance.’ Twice
-mentioned in J.’s article but not translated, perhaps because the
-meaning is so evident. Curious that neither Desg. nor J. specially cite
-this compound to which S. Ch. D. gives 7 lines, besides mentioning
-several combinations.
-
-དཔལ་བླ་མེད་, 52. Is this one word?
-
-དཔལ་འབར་བ་, 53. ‘Glory- or splendour-burning,’ i.e. ‘to blaze with
-glory,’ or, more tamely, ‘to be famous, renowned, celebrated’; the
-latter quoted by J. from Cs. s.v. འབར་བ་ (It may also be taken as
-glory-spreading, i.e. getting more famous). Desg. quotes a geographical
-name དཔལ་འབར་, Chinese Pienpa. The expression is not in Desg. or S. Ch.
-D., and in J. only as taken from Cs., so that the latter’s explanation
-needs verification. The literal translation ‘to blaze with glory’ fits
-here better.
-
-Colloquially འབར་བ་ is ‘to thrive, to prosper, to do well.’ འབར་འདུག་,
-‘he is doing well, is well-to-do, thriving.’ འབར་སོང་, he has become
-rich, has made a success of his life, has come out top dog, has made
-good, has become wealthy, opulent, is safe, got his ship home, has ‘got
-there,’ made his pile, is now a man of position. (Fr. est arrivé. D. is
-binnen, heeft zijn schaapjes op het drooge.)
-
-དཔེ་, 53. Here དཔེ་ = དཔེ་བྱད་ or དཔེ་བྱད་བཟང་པོ་, technically ‘the eighty
-symmetrical parts, proportions, or points of beauty’ (Cs.,
-Mahāvyutpatti); or beauties, lesser signs (de Harlez); proportions
-(Schiefner). See the references under མཚན་ and མཚན་དཔེ་. J. (s.v. དཔེ༌,
-p. 327b) gives the full expression ‘the eighty physical perfections of
-Buddha,’ དཔེ་བྱད་བཟང་པོ་བརྒྱད་ཅུ་, and དཔེ་བྱད་ alone ‘proportion, symmetry,
-beauty.’ J. has the entry དཔེ་ ‘symmetry, harmony, beauty (in certain
-phrases)’ but S. Ch. D. omits this. Our passage is an example of this
-use, but the syllable དཔེ་ is really an abbreviation here and not a full
-and independent word. Desg. seems to be mistaken in saying: དཔེ་བྱེད་
-(sic, misprint for བྱད་) or མཚན་དཔེ་, ‘proportion, symmetry, the 80
-marvels of the body of the Buddha.’ So དཔེ་བྱད་ཅན་ means indeed
-‘symmetrical, showing 80 marvels,’ but these meanings would not be
-applicable to མཚན་དཔེ་ཅན་ which could only mean ‘showing the 32 signs
-and 80 beauties.’
-
-For the rest Desg.’s 2nd article s.v. དཔེ་ adds to J.’s data, and his
-དཔེ་སྲོལ་ and དཔེ་ཚུལ་ ‘custom, rule, example’ are new. In Desg. ‘custom,
-rule’ tally with S. Ch. D. ‘way of doing, method’ which J. has as
-‘pattern, model,’ but which he translates more freely in his examples.
-J. s.v. བྱད་ ‘proportion, symmetry, beauty,’ quotes a དཔེ་བྱད་ from the
-Dzl. in the same sense. According to this དཔེ་ would be equal to བྱད་
-which seems improbable and is denied by my informants. An example of
-the use of དཔེ་ཚུལ་ is the following: དེ་རིང་སང་གི་དགོན་པའི་ལོ་གསར་གྱི་འཆམ་དེ་དང་
-པོའི་དཔེ་ཚུལ་རེད་, the new year’s dance of now-a-days in the monastery is in
-imitation of the old way, is after the ancient pattern, the old manner,
-follows the old example. དཔེ་ཚུལ་ is here not exactly ལུགས་སྲོལ་ ‘custom’
-but rather: ‘(with) the (ancient) method (as) an example.’
-
-Note the use of དང་པོའི་ in the above example as ‘old, ancient.’
-
-དཔེ་འདྲ་པོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-དཔེ་བྱད་ see དཔེ་.
-
-དཔེ་བྱེད་ (= བྱད་) see དཔེ་.
-
-དཔེ་ཚུལ་ see དཔེ་.
-
-དཔེ་སྲོལ་ see དཔེ་.
-
-སྤྲི་ན་དཀར་པོ་, 2, 5. The white cloud is a figure often occurring in
-Tibetan poetry. If used as an emblem of holiness or spiritual loftiness
-in connection with eminent persons, this expression may perhaps contain
-a stereotyped allusion to the name of the tenth and supreme bhūmi or
-stage of the Bodhisattva, the dharma-megha, ‘cloud of virtue,’ ཆོས་ཀྱི་
-སྤྲིན་. See Mahāvyutpatti, ed. A.S.B., p. 11. Here evidently not J.’s
-(336a) ‘emblem of transitoriness,’ though the point might be argued on
-the basis of the final remark s.v. གདུང་བྱངས་, see above.
-
-སྤྲོས་བྲལ་, 51. This word corresponds according to S. Ch. D. to a Sk.
-nishprapañca (or apañca, aprapañca) which in Macdonell’s Sk. Dict. is
-rendered by ‘unevolved, exempt from multiformity.’ We may, therefore,
-think of expressions like ‘the undifferentiated, homogeneous,
-absolute.’ The word dhātu being the Sk. equivalent for Tib. དབྱིངས་ the
-whole expression དབྱིངས་སྤྲོས་བྲལ་ must correspond to a Sk. aprapañca dhātu.
-The same Sk. Dict. translates the word dhātu as ‘layer, component part,
-element.’ In Tibetan དབྱིངས་ means, according to J.: (1) ‘the heavens’;
-(2) ‘height’; (3) ‘extent, region, space, in metaphysics an undefined
-idea.’ According to the etymology སྤྲོས་བྲལ་ should mean ‘passive,
-actionless, quietistic, inert,’ but according to the etymology of its
-Sk. prototype rather ‘undifferentiated, monadic.’ One of my informants
-compares it with ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབྱངས་, dharma dhātu, and སྟོང་པ་ཉིད་, shunyatā, the
-void, the absolute. In this connection one should compare J.’s
-statements (215a) that in modern (Tibetan) Buddhism the term མངོན་པར་
-རྟོགས་པ་ (अभिसमय), ‘clear understanding or perception’ means the same as
-སྟོང་པ་ཉིད་, and further (259b) that དོན་དམ་, originally परमार्थ, has, in
-later times, also become equivalent to སྟོང་པ་ཉིད་. It seems that the old
-metaphysicians reached regions and distinctions where their followers
-could no longer join them, and hence the process became ‘omne ignotum
-pro སྟོང་པ་ཉིད་.’ For practical purposes the rendering ‘absolute,’ or
-‘motionless’ might be used for སྤྲོས་བྲལ་, whilst the word དབྱིངས་ might be
-rendered by ‘principle, state, region.’ If occurring in a specimen of
-the more technically and theoretically philosophical literature of
-Northern Buddhism, a more precise rendering and more careful definition
-might be required. Taking the following རྟོགས་པ་ as ‘knowledge,
-perception, cognition,’ then the whole expression becomes in English
-‘the knowledge of the motionless state (or region, or principle)’
-or—more pedantic but perhaps truer—‘the knowledge of (that is:
-pertaining to, inherent in) the monadic state.’ Other equivalents: ‘a
-state of stillness, the still state’ and, mystically, ‘the wisdom of
-the silence.’
-
-One of my informants, the dge rgan, knows of a colloquial use of སྤྲོས་བྲལ་
-= རེ་བ་མེད་ = ‘hopeless,’ but my second authority ignores this use. The
-following two examples were given: འདི་ཤེས་པ་སྤྲོས་བྲལ་རེད་, ‘it is labour
-lost (hopeless) to [try and] know this.’ You cannot hope to know this.
-(N.B.—Note the elliptic construction ‘hopeless to know’ for ‘to try to
-know, to study and so come to know.’) ཡི་གེ་ཡག་པོ་ཀློག་ཤེས་ཀྱི་མི་འདུག་སུམ་རྟགས་ཤེས་
-པ་སྤྲོས་བྲལ་རེད་, ‘As he does not even know how to read well (or properly),
-it is hopeless (lost labour), for him to (or: how can he?) study
-grammar’ (Not: how can he pretend to know grammar?).
-
-N.B.—The Tibetan does not ‘read’ but ‘reads books’; he does not ‘write’
-but ‘writes letters,’ he does not ‘go’ but ‘goes to the shop.’ In
-short, he is a very objective being.
-
-ཕ་, 8. ‘Father.’ It is not clear why in the same line the same person
-is referred to by the ordinary ཕ་ and then by the honorific ཡབ་, unless
-ཡབ་སྲས་ is a standard expression which cannot be changed whilst the
-first ཕ་ is used for the sake of variety in expression.
-
-The same double use of the honorific and ordinary terms for father
-occurs in Laufer’s ‘Ein Sühngedicht der Bonpo’, line 41.
-
-ཕྱོགས་, 5. In expressions like ལྡིང་བའི་ཤར་ཕྱོགས་ན་ the བའི་ is explained as
-equivalent to སའི་, ‘of the place where.’ So the phrase མི་དེ་འགྲོ་བའི་ཕྱོགས་
-འདི་ལ་ should be understood as ‘towards where the man has gone, to the
-place where the man has gone,’ འགྲོ་སའི་ཕྱོགས་འདི་ལ་.
-
-ཕྱོགས་པ་, 14. Here verb, infinitive, connected with Gendundub in
-instrumental (agentive) or genitival relation: to turn, move towards,
-to tend to.
-
-ཕྱོགས་སུ་ལྷུང་བ་, 46. Lit. ‘to fall aside,’ but here, as applied to the mind
-(ཡིད་), simply to be deflected, to go astray, to fall, sin (mentally),
-to deviate from the right path (religion, the right), to lapse (from
-virtue), etc.
-
-འཕུང་བར་འདོད་པ་, 29. ‘To wish the ruin, the undoing, destruction of, to
-be bent on the perdition of, to wish evil to’ = མེད་པར་འདོད་པ་.
-
-བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་, 17. The bodhimaṇḍa, according to the Dicts. historically
-and geographically Gaya, where the Buddha attained nirvāṇa. Here,
-however, it means rather the state implied by the locality,
-‘illumination, the essence of purification, final sainthood’ literally
-‘the quintessence of bodhi.’ In Christian language Golgotha (or the
-Cross) is similarly used in a metaphorical sense. In living Tibetan བྱང་
-ཆུབ་ (bodhi) is not understood as ‘wisdom’ but as ‘saintliness, purity.’
-There is, it seems, a confusion in the group of Tibetan [and Chinese!]
-renderings of bodhimaṇḍa (bodhi-essence) and bodhi-maṇḍala
-(bodhi-round), and their synonyms, a confusion which may already have
-its origin in India itself. The treatment of these words in the Dicts.
-is not satisfactory. J. and S. Ch. D. give s.v. བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་ this word
-as synonymous with རྡོ་རྗེ་གདན་, Vajrāsana, but under སྙིང་པོ་ S. Ch. D. has
-the entry: ‘བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་, the spirit of the Bodhisattva, i.e.
-Buddhahood.’ This is the sense meant in our passage, though it may be
-doubted whether བྱང་ཆུབ་ really stands here for བྱང་ཆུབ་སེམས་དཔའ་ as S. Ch.
-D. interprets it instead of only for bodhi. The Mahāvyutpatti (A.S.B.,
-p. 44) has Bodhimaṇḍa = བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་, and Cs. translates, ‘the essence
-of sanctity or holiness (name of the holy place at Gaya).’ I yet
-believe that here a confusion of maṇḍa and maṇḍala must be thought of.
-J. has, s.v. སྙིང་པོ་ (p. 198b) ‘snyiṅ-po-byaṅ c̀ʽúb- (or
-byaṅ-c̀ʽub-snyiṅ-po)-la mc̀ʽís-pa, to become Buddha Thgy.’ Rockhill, Life
-of the Buddha, p. 35, mentions the form byang-tchub-kyi-snying-po as
-the equivalent for bodhimaṇḍa, and though Foucaux in the alphabetical
-index to his translation of the Lalita Vistāra gives only the form
-without ཀྱི་, yet in his text, in the places I verified (p. 239, five
-times), there is the ཀྱི་ as with Rockhill.
-
-In mentioning the word རྡོ་རྗེ་གདན་ a special reference must be made to the
-element གདན་, commonly translated as bolster, cushion, seat, rug, etc.
-J. is very detailed about it. He has: ‘a bolster, or seat composed of
-several quilts or cushions, put one upon the other (five for common
-people, nine for people of quality).’ Desg. simply ‘stuffed cushion.’
-S. Ch. D. more general ‘a low seat, a divan, cushion, a bolster.’ As to
-J.’s definition my authorities declare that this may be so perhaps ‘on
-the Ladakh side,’ but is certainly not so in Tibet and in the
-Darjeeling district. They do not know about the details of five and
-nine cushions. They take the meaning far wider than bolster or cushion.
-They say that anything used to support anything or to seat anybody may
-be called གདན་, it may be a sheet of cloth, a carpet, a blanket, a
-cushion, a bolster, a seat in general, anything used for lying or
-sitting down on. The word has a meaning exactly opposite to the English
-‘cover’ and can consequently be used in as many varied senses as the
-latter. Etymologically—if the root of གདན་, as seems probable, means
-‘to support’—the word would mean something like ‘bearer,’ ‘basis,’
-‘bed,’ ‘floor,’ ‘upholder.’ We might think of ‘underwear,’ though in
-English that particular word is used with quite another association of
-ideas. In typography there is a word ‘underlay’ which corresponds
-exactly to the meaning of གདན་. The word ‘bedplate’, used in
-engineering, comes also near to it. It will be easily seen how an
-applied meaning as ‘cushion, bolster,’ if given as the general sense of
-the word, would in many cases be totally inadequate. The line of
-associations to which ‘cushion’ belongs, and the line of associations
-to which ‘seat, support, underlay’ belong, intersect at only one point
-and for the rest have nothing in common. A table-cloth may be called
-གདན་ because the food rests on it (ལྟོ་གདན་ is used in this sense; lit.
-something like ‘food-sheet, that on which the food rests’). In a ritual
-it is prescribed that the གདན་ for the offerings should be a spotless
-piece of white cotton or other cloth, called མཆོད་གདན་, ‘offering
-sheet,’ ‘that on which the offerings rest.’ Bell has ས་གདན་ for
-‘carpet’; small cushion, placed on chair ཁ་གདན་; large cushion on
-ground འབོལ་གདན་. This is a most interesting example illustrating the
-fact that it is strictly necessary first to find out the root-idea of a
-Tibetan word before translating it by words representing the incidental
-applications of that root-idea. Whoever has handled Chinese
-dictionaries knows how specially necessary this is in studying
-Indo-Chinese languages. The Sanskrit equivalent, āsana, is derived from
-the root ās, to sit or lie, but the Tib. root seems different.
-
-Further notes on གདན་. Cf. J. མ་གདན་ (pr. magdàn), ground, basis,
-foundation, p. 409a. Bell, apron པང་གདན་. Cs., Grammar, p. 170, l. 10,
-translates གདན་ as couch (stuffed seat). Lewin, Manual, p. 123, first
-word last line: ‘mat, seat’, in the same sentence taken over from Cs.’s
-Grammar. Two synonyms for J.’s མ་གདན་, quoted above, are རྨང་གདན་ and
-གཞི་གདན་. Bell also has ‘mat.’
-
-བྱམས་སྙིང་རྗེ་, 50. Seems simply an amplified form for ‘love.’ Difficult to
-be translated exactly, Sk. maitrīkaruṇā, may be treated as a compound,
-loving-kindness, love and kindness, or pity. On the question of karuṇā,
-especially, the learned have descanted profusely.
-
-བླ་ (ན་) མེད་ (པ་), 52. Sk. अनुत्तर, unsurpassed, unexcelled, unrivalled,
-supreme, incomparable, most high, highest. Not specially entered in J.
-but illustrated by an example s.v. བླ་. Altogether absent in Desg. S.
-Ch. D. བླ་མེད་རྣམས་ལ་, ‘to those who are supreme, or to the followers of
-the Anuttara school.’ A curious entry! See S. Ch. D. also s.v. བླ་ན་.
-
-བླ་མ་, 3. Here perhaps better ‘teacher’ than ‘priest’ or ‘superior.’ The
-word may be here equally well taken in the singular as in the plural,
-but the latter is perhaps more likely.
-
-བླ་མེད་, see བླ་ན་མེད་པ་.
-
-བློ་གཟུ་བོ་, 47. ‘Straight, upright, righteous mind.’ J.’s entry is a
-little vague. I think he takes ཐུགས་ in his example ཐུགས་གཟུ་བོ་ as an
-indication that གཟུ་བོ་ is also a honorific form. That, however, is not
-the case. Compare also the quotation from Cs. in S. Ch. D., གཟུ་བོར་གནས་
-པ་ ‘to be impartial and straightforward, to be on the side of honesty.’
-I don’t find this example in Schmidt. Desg. ‘straight, upright,
-(élevé,) just, honest.’ According to the above the word is an adj. and
-the translation of the passage becomes ‘whether you persevere in a
-straight (righteous) mind.’ The verb གནས་པ་ has then to be taken as ‘to
-hold, adhere to, persevere in (an opinion, etc.).’ If however, we
-should find that གཟུ་བོ་ can also be sbst. ‘righteousness,’
-‘straightness,’ (not in any Dict.), then གནས་པ་ would have the other
-meaning of ‘to dwell, reside’ and the phrase would have to be rendered
-‘whether the mind (continues to) dwell(s) in righteousness.’ S. Ch. D.
-renders ཐུགས་གཟུ་བོ་ as ‘honest mind,’ but the sense honest versus
-dishonest seems not quite applicable in our passage. J. is vague here.
-My informants gave the above definition ‘straight, upright’ as their
-own but felt afterwards vague about this example which, though they had
-framed it, they could not vouch for: མི་དེ་གཟུ་བོར་གནས་མི་གནས་ལྟོས་ཤིག་, ‘see
-whether the man keeps straight or not.’ The framer honestly confessed
-that whilst we were discussing the word he had been influenced by S.
-Ch. D.’s Dict. in coining the sentence; a confession so instructive for
-idiom-verifiers that I think it worth while to record it here.
-
-Finally, Desg. supports S. Ch.’s second meaning ‘witness’ for གཟུ་བོ་.
-He, however, does not give S. Ch.’s form གཟུ་དཔང་. The ordinary word for
-witness is, of course, དཔང་ (པོ་). It is characteristic of S. Ch. D.
-that he copies J.’s extract from Sch. under གཟུ་དཔང་ ‘witness,
-mediator,’ but then immediately adds his own individual interpretation
-which not only is likely to be correct, but which also nullifies and
-contradicts the previous entry which he copied immediately above. He
-himself says, ‘an honest and truthful witness.’ It often occurs that S.
-Ch. D. brings modifications, extensions and even corrections to J.’s
-statements, but at the same time he copies J. far too slavishly and so
-contradicts himself in the pages of his own dictionary. Whether
-meanings like ‘reliable, straightforward, correct, proper,’ etc., have
-to be attached to གཟུ་བོ་ is as yet uncertain.
-
-བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ་, 8. In Sk. Sumatikīrti. According to the Sk. dictionaries
-the primary sense of ‘sumati’ is ‘benevolence.’ In present-day Tibetan
-བློ་བཟང་ is rather ‘good-natured, kindhearted,’ as against དྲིན་ཆེན་པོ་
-‘benevolent.’ So the Tibetan name has to be rendered as
-Good-nature-fame, or Famous good-nature, the personal name of Tsoṅ kʽa
-pa.
-
-དབང་དུ་ (མ་) སོང་བ་, 22. (Not) fallen under the power (of)....
-
-དབྱངས་, 54 and colophon. This word seems here hardly to mean ‘song,
-singing tune,’ but rather ‘melody, melodiousness, sweetness,’ etc. This
-tallies to a certain extent with Csoma’s translation of the title of
-list LXI (p. 86) of the Mahāvyutpatti, ‘Names of the 60 sorts (or
-divisions) of melody or melodious voices (or vocal sound).’ I take it
-that this list refers to what is mentioned here in our text. How these
-60 branches of melody are exactly to be understood I have not been able
-to ascertain. The opinions of Pʽun Tsʽogs on the point are as follows.
-The Buddha’s voice had such a variety of (magic?) qualities, sixty in
-number, that they made him understood by all beings, whatever their own
-languages. The Buddha was in this way simultaneously understood by men,
-devas, nāgas, etc. In proffering this explanation Pʽun Tsʽogs takes ཡན་
-ལག་ to mean rather ‘kind’ than ‘branch.’ As an alternative he suggests
-that དབྱངས་ is an adjective synonymous with རིང་བུ༌, ‘high’ (as applied to
-voice or rather tone) [or perhaps long, lengthened?] and that then
-དབྱངས་ཡན་ལག་ would mean a ‘variety’ of tones or modulations. I myself am
-inclined to think that if the Mahāvyutpatti list is not referred to, we
-have here to do with some scholastic scheme of rhetorics, though if so
-understood the exact value of དབྱངས་ is not clear and certainly not
-sufficiently defined in the Dicts.
-
-(Cf. S. Ch. D. s.v. ཟབ་ (p. 1092a), ཟབ་དབྱངས་ = मन्द्र, मन्द्रक, ‘a deep
-voice, a musical tone.’ See also གདུང་དབྱངས་.)
-
-དབྱིངས་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-དབྱིངས་སྤྲོས་བྲལ་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-འབར་བ་ see དཔལ་འབར་བ་.
-
-འབོལ་གདན་ see བྱང་ཆུབ་སྙིང་པོ་.
-
-འབྲོག་, 6. Here ‘solitude, wilderness’ and so = རི་ཁྲོད་ = དགོན་པ་,
-‘monastery.’ Not associated with any of the meanings connected with
-‘pasturing.’ Cf. S. Ch. D. འབྲོག་དགོན་ s.v. འབྲོག་.
-
-The famous Galdan monastery was erected on a site called འབྲོག་པོའི་རི་. See
-S. Ch. D., The Monasteries of Tibet, J.A.S.B., Vol. I, N.S. (1905), p.
-108.
-
-མི་ཁོ་ see གླུད་.
-
-མི་ཁོ་གླུད་ཡིན་ see གླུད་.
-
-མི་གླུད་ see གླུད་.
-
-མིག་བཟང་མ་ see ཡངས་.
-
-མིག་ཡངས་ see ཡངས་.
-
-མེད་པར་འདོད་པ་ see འཕུང་བར་འདོད་པ་.
-
-མྱུར་, 52. J. མྱུར་བ་ adj., and མྱུར་དུ་ adv., ‘quick(ly), swift(ly).’ In Mil.
-adj. མྱུར་པོ་. Desg. མྱུར་ and མྱུར་བ་ (ཉིད་), subst. ‘promptness,’ and མྱུར་པོ་
-‘swift.’ As adv. མྱུར་བར་, or དུ་, or གྱིས་. S. Ch. D. མྱུར་བ་, verb, ‘to
-hurry by, to pass on swiftly,’ (example དུས་མྱུར་བ་, ‘time quickly runs
-away.’ [= tempus fugit]), and adv. quickly. Further adv. མྱུར་དུ་. Some
-interesting compounds in S. Ch. D.: མྱུར་མ་ ‘a dancing woman,’ etc. Note
-the expression ཅི་མྱུར་ ‘as speedily as possible,’ J.
-
-According to my informants S. Ch. D.’s example དུས་མྱུར་བ་ is not good
-Tibetan. It should either be དུས་མྱུར་པོ་ (or བ་) ཡིན་, lit. ‘time is
-quick,’ or with another meaning also ‘the time is near’ (i.e. at hand,
-coming quickly), or again དུས་མྱུར་པོ་དེ་, ‘the quick time.’ Time quickly
-runs away, they say, should be expressed thus: དུས་མྱུར་བར་འགྲོ་གི་འདུག་.
-
-Cf. also J., Desg.: སྨྱུར་བ་.
-
-མྱུར་མ་ see མྱུར་.
-
-ཙམ་གྱི་, 38. Here: ‘after only, as a result of only, in consequence of
-only, mere, simple.’ But ཙམ་ has also the meanings: as soon as, simply
-on (hearing), on the slightest (reproach, etc.) with a more prominent
-stress on the time element, instantaneousness.
-
-རྩེ་དྲུང་ see བརྩེ་.
-
-རྩེ་པོ་ཏ་ལ་ see བརྩེ་.
-
-རྩེ་ཞྭ་ see བརྩེ་.
-
-རྩོད་པ་རྒྱབ་པ་ see གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་.
-
-བརྩེ་, 55. བརྩེ་ = བརྩེ་བ་, vb. ‘to love’ sbst. ‘love, kindness, affection,’
-etc. Desg. has also a བརྩེ་, ‘acidity,’ which is also known to my
-informants. His བརྩེ་དྲང་ ‘bodyguard of the Dalai Lama’ is held, by one of
-my informants, to be a mistake for རྩེ་དྲུང་ (pronounce tsī-dung), the
-monk-employees of the Tibetan government (and in a narrower sense: the
-clerical staff, the clerks and secretaries amongst them) as contrasted
-with the lay-employees of noble birth (not officials in general as with
-S. Ch. D. 656a, but only those belonging to the nobility) who are
-called དྲུང་འཁོར་. The word རྩེ་ in the compound is said to be derived from
-the designation of the Potala palace where many of the government
-offices are located, and which is called རྩེ་པོ་ཏ་ལ་, the Potala peak, but
-most commonly, by the people, briefly རྩེ་, the peak. This explanation of
-tsī-dung as a general class of lama government-employees is wider than
-that given in Waddell’s table in his ‘Lhasa and its Mysteries,’ p. 165.
-See also རྩེ་དྲུང་, ‘chief clerk or secretary’ in S. Ch. D. s.v. རྩེ་ཞྭ་
-(1013b), the latter being the special name of the former’s hat.
-
-བརྩེ་དྲང་ see བརྩེ་.
-
-བརྩོན་པར་བགྱིད་པ་, 24. Equals བརྩོན་པར་བྱེད་པ་ (or གྱུར་བ་) ‘to apply oneself,
-exert oneself, put one’s best energy into something’ = སྙིང་རུས་བྱེད་པ་, ‘to
-be zealous, diligent.’ Also བརྩོན་འགྲུས་སྐྱེད་པ་ (བྱེད་པ་, རྩོམ་པ་).
-
-ཚུལ་, 28. Here ‘conduct, behaviour’ pure and simple, without allusion to
-the ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས་, ‘religious law, discipline, monastic rules.’
-
-ཚུལ་བཞིན་ see ཆོས་ཚུལ་བཞིན་.
-
-མཚན་, 53. Here technically the (thirty-two) characteristic signs or
-marks of a ‘Great Man,’ the mahāpurusha. Mahāvyutpatti (Ed. A. S. B.),
-LXIII, p. 92. De Harlez, ‘Vocabulaire Bouddhique Sanscrit-Chinois,’ no.
-3. Schiefner, ‘Triglotte,’ no. 3. See de la Vallée Poussin,
-‘Bouddhisme,’ pp. 241 et seq.
-
-The transition of meaning of the word མཚན་ in modern Tibetan in such
-expressions as མཚན་ལྡན་བླ་མ་, ‘a holy lama,’ or མཚན་ལྡན་མ་, ‘a woman of
-good appearance and virtues’ (S. Ch. D.) should not be overlooked in
-the interpretation of our passage for its psychological value. See also
-དཔེ་.
-
-མཚན་ལྡན་ see མཚན་.
-
-མཚན་དཔེ་, 53. This is a compound substantive of an elliptic nature, and
-means: ‘the [well known 32 primary] characteristics [and the 80]
-beauties [of Buddhas]’ = མཚན་དང་དཔེ་བྱད་ (བཟང་པོ་). See also མཚན་ and དཔེ་.
-
-མཚན་འཛིན་, 30. མཚན་ is here hon. of མིང་ ‘name,’ and the compound,
-literally ‘name grasping,’ means ‘ambition, thirst for fame, glory,’
-etc. (D. eerzucht, roemzucht), perhaps even ‘vainglory, pride, conceit,
-egotism,’ i.e. the hugging of one’s own name and fame.
-
-མཚན་བརྗོད་པ་, 7. To invoke by name, to address a prayer to by name.
-Applied to both spiritual and human beings. རྒྱལ་པོའི་མཚན་བརྗོད་པ་, ‘to
-address the king, speak to the king, direct, appeal to the king,’ but
-always by calling him by his name. ‘O king help me’ is not a proper
-example of མཚན་བརྗོད་པ་, but ‘O, thou, King George, help me!’ would be
-one. To spiritual beings their names may be expressed in a paraphrase,
-metaphor or symbol, but they must be expressed in some way. The prayers
-to superhuman beings may be twofold, either an address containing
-requests, etc., or a mere litany of names without any further subject
-matter attached to them. The one is a recitation of names, the other a
-direct address by name; the one a litany proper, the other an
-invocation or prayer.
-
-འཚོལ་བ་, 19. The form མི་འཚོལ་བས་ was paraphrased to me as འཚོལ་གི་མིན་ =
-འཚོལ་མི་ཡོང་ = simple future, ‘not going to seek’ (D. niet zullende
-zoeken).
-
-ཞིབ་དཔྱད་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-ཞེ་ཁྲེལ་བ་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-ཞེན་པ་ལོག་པ་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-གཞན་བསྟན་ (པ་) འཛིན་པ་ see རང་བསྟན་ (པ་) འཛིན་པ་.
-
-གཞུང་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-གཞུང་སྒོ་ see སྒོ་.
-
-གཞུངས་པ་ see ཁྲེལ་བ་.
-
-གཞེས་ see མགུར་མ་.
-
-བཞག་པ་ see རྒྱན་པ་.
-
-ཟབ་, 10, 55. ཟབ་ = ཟབ་པ་. J. vb., adj., subst. and adv. ‘to be deep,
-deep, deeply, depth’; adj. ཟབ་པོ་ and མོ་. Desg. ཟབ་པོ་ and མོ་ adj. only.
-S. Ch. D. ཟབ་པ་ vb. ‘to make deep, to deepen,’ also adj. and sbst.;
-further in པོ་ and མོ་ only adj. Note the additional meaning ‘dense’
-(also ཟབས་ ‘thickness’) in S. Ch. D., not in the two others. My
-teachers deny that ཟབ་པ་ can be a verb ‘to deepen,’ or ‘to make deep.’
-ཟབ་ must also be understood as ‘profound’ (wisdom, teaching, etc.). See
-ཆོས་ཟབ་, also དབྱངས་, also ཐུགས་ནི་, etc.
-
-ཟབ་ཡངས་ see ཐུགས་ནི་, etc.
-
-གཟུ་བོ་ see བློ་གཟུ་བོ་.
-
-གཟུ་དཔང་ see བློ་གཟུ་བོ་.
-
-གཟུ་བོར་གནས་པ་ see བློ་གཟུ་བོ་.
-
-འུ་ཐུག་ see སྡུག་ཡུས་.
-
-ཡང་རྩེ་ see དྭངས་མར་.
-
-ཡངས་, 55. = ཡངས་པ་ or པོ་, ‘wide, large.’ Desg. also ‘ample, abundant.’
-S. Ch. D. only ཡངས་པ་. Note J. ‘*mig-yaṅ*’, C., W. liberal, generous,
-bounteous,’ but Desg. མིག་ཡངས་པ་ ‘wide-eyes: envious, covetous, greedy.’
-In S. Ch. D. ཡངས་པའི་མིག་ = विशालाक्षी, ‘large-eyes, a handsome woman, name of
-a Goddess.’ Cf. also in the same dict. མིག་བཟང་མ་, ‘beautiful-eyes, a
-very handsome woman, a nymph’s name.’ As to J.’s mig-yaṅ, one of my
-teachers holds with him as against Desg., the other does not know the
-expression.
-
-ཡངས་པའི་མིག་ see ཡངས་.
-
-ཡན་ལག་ see དབྱངས་.
-
-ཡབ་སྲས་ (གསུམ༌), 8, 15, 16, 18. ‘Father (and) sons,’ or, as Csoma already
-has it in his Grammar, p. 28, ‘teacher and pupils.’ With the addition
-གསུམ་ ‘three,’ and also as here without this addition, a very well known
-appellation of Tsoṅ kʽa pa and his two pupils (his spiritual sons). It
-is likely that to the Tibetan mind the expression means something like
-‘spiritual family (of three),’ namely of one father and two sons. See
-introductory remarks. Free renderings like ‘spiritual trio’ or ‘teacher
-triad’ and the like are apt enough for practical purposes. Cf. an
-expression like the following: ཁྱོད་ཕ་བུ་གཉིས་ག་ནས་ཡིན་, ‘where have you
-two, father and son, come from?’ (But the sentence has also the second
-meaning ‘where do you live? where is your home?’).
-
-In the light of the above, has the note on p. 98 of the J.A.S.B., Vol.
-II, N.S., no. 4, 1906, in Satis Chandra Vidyābhūṣana’s article on ‘the
-Gyantse rock inscription’ to be rectified? My informants do not think
-that the expression is used among the Sakyapas in the sense given in
-that note.
-
-ཡིན་ན་ཡང་ see ཀྱང་.
-
-ཡུས་ see སྡུག་ཡུས་.
-
-གཡུལ་ see འགྱེ་བ་.
-
-གཡུལ་འགྱེད་ see འགྱེ་བ་.
-
-རང་ see དྭངས་མར་.
-
-རང་བསྟན་ (པ་) འཛིན་པ་, 26. This expression must here not be understood as
-‘to follow one’s own teaching.’ རང་བསྟན་ is here not one compound word.
-The meaning is: they who themselves follow the teaching, as against the
-གཞན་བསྟན་པ་འཛིན་པ་, the others who (also) follow the teaching. See གཞན་
-བསྟན་ (པ་) འཛིན་པ་, 27.
-
-རི་ཁྲོད་ see འབྲོག་ and གངས་རིའི་ཁྲོད་འདི་ན་.
-
-རི་འབྲོག་ see འབྲོག་ and གངས་རིའི་ཁྲོད་འདི་ན་.
-
-རིག་པ་ see མཁྱེན་བརྩེ་.
-
-རིག་པ་བསྒྲིམས་ནས་ see གོལ་ས་.
-
-རིང་བུ་ see དབྱངས་.
-
-རུས་ཐང་ see དྭངས་མར་.
-
-རེ་ see དོན་རེ་ཆུང་.
-
-རེ་བ་མེད་ see སྤྲོས་བྲལ་.
-
-ལན་འཕམ་པ་ see གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་.
-
-ལམ་གོལ་ see གོལ་ས་.
-
-ལམ་གོལ་ས་ see གོལ་ས་.
-
-ལམ་མཐོན་པོ་, 31. ‘The high, elevated road,’ has a religious connotation,
-the proper road that leads to heaven after death, the ‘narrow’ road of
-Christianity. See below.
-
-ལམ་དྲང་པོ་, 48. The straight road (metaphorically), the road of
-righteousness, of straightness of mind. Cf. S. Ch. D. s.v. དྲང་ལམ་, p.
-649a. The meaning of this expression and that of ལམ་མཐོན་པོ་, in line 31
-(see above), are quite different. The other is the highroad (towards
-heaven), the road of a high standard of moral conduct.
-
-ལམ་རིམ་, 9. ‘Steps on the path,’ ‘degrees of advance,’ ‘steps towards
-perfection,’ is the short title of many mystical writings and
-especially of one by Tsoṅ kʽa pa, to which the words may allude here
-without specially designating it. In this place the meaning does not
-seem to be a specific work but merely ‘(religious) instructions,
-teaching in general.’ The ལམ་རིམ་པ་གཉིས་ are here, according to my oral
-information, to be taken as the two halves or divisions of the Kandjur
-which is commonly divided into མདོ་ and སྔགས་, sūtra and tantra (or
-mantra, or dhāraṇī). In this division the རྒྱུད་ or tantra section is
-called སྔགས་, whilst all the rest, properly subdivided in six divisions,
-is taken together as མདོ་, of which the real མདོ་སྡེ་ or sūtra-division
-(the 5th in sequence in the Kandjur) is only one. Concerning Tsoṅ kʽa
-pa’s study of the ‘Sūtras and Tantras’ see S. Ch. D., ‘Contributions,
-etc. on Tibet,’ VI, in J.A.S.B., 1882, Vol. LI, Part I, no. 1, p. 53.
-J., s.v. བསྟན་པ་, quotes a བསྟན་པ་གཉིས་: ‘with Urgyan Padma, etc., the
-same as mdoi and sṅags kyi lam, v. mdo extr.’ This is seemingly the
-same as our expression.
-
-ལུས་ཅན་, 42. J. has = སེམས་ཅན་, ‘beings, creatures,’ but may not the idea
-rather be all embodied creatures; with the etymological sense still
-potent in connection with the Buddhist reincarnation theory? S. Ch. D.
-gives a ལུས་ཅན་གནས་ = གྲོང་ཁྱེར་ = ‘town, city,’ which seems rather to point
-to the meaning ‘man’ for ལུས་ཅན་. My informants don’t feel quite certain
-whether to include the five other classes of beings (including animals)
-amongst the ལུས་ཅན་, but are somewhat inclined to interpret the word as
-མི་, ‘man,’ in general.
-
-ཤ་འཛིན་ see ཀྱུ་.
-
-ཤར་གངས་རི་མ་, title, 1. The author writes his poem in a place to the
-west of a snow-capped mountain, to the east of which the Galdan
-monastery is situated. See notes on འབྲོག་, དགེ་ལྡན་ and གངས་རིའི་ཁྲོད་འདི་ན་.
-Which mountain or mountain chain is meant must be left undecided, even
-if granting that modern cartography could show it if identified. Local
-tradition, however, would most likely be able to point out a particular
-mountain.
-
-ཤེས་པ་ see མཁྱེན་བརྩེ་.
-
-ཤོས་ see རིན་ཆེ་བ་.
-
-གཤགས་ see གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་.
-
-གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་, 38. This expression cannot yet be explained with
-certainty. It may be taken here to mean, literally, ‘to send out
-(distribute, give, put forward) justice, right,’ but the exact
-idiomatic value of the phrase remains to be determined. It is not in
-the Dicts., and unknown to my informants. We may take the possible
-values of the expression as three, viz.: 1. གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་ = རྩོད་པ་རྒྱབ་པ་ =
-གཤགས་རྒྱབ་པ་ = ‘to dispute, argue, contend with words.’ This seems the
-same expression as S. Ch. D.’s ཁ་གཤགས་འགྱེད་པ་ ‘to hold controversy,’ p.
-1248. (Perhaps also ‘to challenge, to be challenged to dispute.’) 2. =
-ལན་འཕམ་པ་ ‘to be defeated in argument, in dispute, to be silenced in
-dispute.’
-
-3. = ‘To make observations to, to remonstrate with, to use plain speech
-to, to speak straight to, to rebuke, to reproach, to tell one the
-truth.’ (Cf. the entry in J.’s *kʽa kye-c̀e* to abuse, to menace’ (p.
-97b.)) This seems the sense required here and would be a logical
-development of the primary meaning of the expression: ‘to spread out
-the justice (right) of the case before someone,’ i.e. ‘to submit the
-truth about it.’
-
-S. Ch. D. has s.v. ཁ་གཤགས་ = ཁ་རྩོད་ ‘using rough language, controversy,
-discussion, dispute.’ The other Dicts. lack this word.
-
-The above is the result of an exhaustive discussion of the expression
-with my teachers. Lexicographically (with a view to the entry quoted
-from S. Ch. D.) the first explanation seems the best, but with
-reference to the context, the last one deserves preference, and this is
-the one chosen for the rendering.
-
-It should be noted that in modern Tibetan there seems to be taking
-place a shifting of the meaning of གཤགས་. Instead of as ‘right,
-justice’ it seems to be understood by some modern Tibetans as ‘the
-arguing about right or justice’ as in a court of law, and hence simply
-as ‘dispute, argument, pleading.’ Example: ‘This is not the place to
-argue your rights,’ ཁྱོད་གཤགས་རྒྱབ་སའི་ (or པའི་) ས་ཆ་འདི་རུ་མ་རེད་, lit. ‘to
-hit out (རྒྱབ་) for the right,’ the verb meaning ‘to do (རྒྱབ་ for verba
-loquendi) arguing (གཤགས་).’
-
-བཤད་ཉན་, 38. Literally ‘speak-listen,’ has two meanings. The first,
-quoted in J. from Schmidt in the form of འཆད་ཉན་པ་ (s.v. འཆད་པ་ pf. and
-fut. བཤད་), is endorsed by my informants, ‘to listen to an explanation
-(also, to a sermon, discourse, etc.)’. The second is, ‘to answer upon
-hearing,’ i.e. ‘to answer (in invective, hotly, in remonstrance or
-dispute) upon hearing (reproaches or unpleasant words).’ If a mother
-chides her son for some fault, he may, instead of taking the rebuke in
-humility, try to argue or to be impudent in return. The mother then may
-say: ང་ཁྱོད་ཀྱི་ཨ་མ་ལ་བཤད་ཉན་མ་བྱེད་འདི་ལས་ངའི་གཏམ་ཉོན་, ‘Don’t argue, dispute,
-bandy words with (don’t be impudent to, “no words with me!”) your
-mother, but (འདི་ལས་, ‘rather, on the contrary, instead of this’) listen
-to me.’ The expression may be rendered as ‘to flare up in answer (to a
-reproach), to retort angrily (after admonition), to snap, yap back.’
-
-བཤེས་གཉེན་, 41. ‘Friend’ and, as J. has it, abbr. for དགེ་བའི་བཤེས་གཉེན་ =
-कल्याणमित्र = virtue-friend.
-
-Here interpreted by my informants as ‘true, genuine priests or monks,
-monks who come up to the mark, worthy of the name,’ but not technically
-as ‘spiritual adviser’ as J. has it. Desg. s.v. བཤེས་, quotes only a
-form with མཉེན་ and gives it the meaning ‘doctor, a lamaistic title.’
-Under གཉེན་, however, he has བཤེས་གཉེན་, ‘ad scientiam adjuvans, monastic
-dignity, teacher.’ S. Ch. D. adds ‘pious or holy friend, spiritual
-friend or adviser.’ Compare also J. for the semi-homonym དགེ་བསྙེན་.
-
-ས་ see ཕྱོགས་.
-
-སེམས་པ་ see བསམས་ཤིང་ and བཀའ་དྲིན་སེམས་པ་.
-
-སེམས་བསྐྱེད་པ་ see སྐྱེད་པ་.
-
-གསུང་, 54. Here ‘speech’ in general, not ‘a speech,’ a slight extension
-of J.’s meanings, unless his use of the definite article in ‘the
-speech’ is a lapsus. The dicts. differ slightly and need co-ordination
-in details. About the meaning there can be no doubt as the word is here
-used in the series (hon.) སྐུ་, གསུང་, ཐུགས་, for ordinary ལུས་, ངག་, ཡིད་,
-body, speech and mind, the so-called ‘three doors,’ སྒོ་གསུམ་.
-
-གསུང་མགུར་ see མགུར་མ་.
-
-གསུང་བ་, 10. Here is the sense of ‘to preach, to explain, to give an
-exposition of, to expatiate on, to exhibit, to lecture on.’
-
-བསམ་མནོ་ see རྟོག་དཔྱོད་.
-
-བསམ་མི་ཁྱབ་, 12. Inconceivable, unthinkable, unimaginable, not to be
-grasped by or in thought, beyond comprehension, realisation.
-
-བསམས་ཤིང་བསམས་ཤིང་, 4. The repetition of the verb softens the meaning
-into ‘quietly thinking’ or from སེམས་པ་ ‘to think,’ into ‘to muse, to
-ponder’, etc.
-
-ཨང་གི་དང་པོ་ see དྭངས་མར་.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-F. ADDITIONAL NOTES.
-
-
-In l. 10 the ལ་ might also be understood as ‘with a view to, for the
-purpose of, explaining, expounding.’ The translation should in that
-case rather run: With a view to expounding the profound (Buddhist)
-doctrine, they preached, explained, most fully, minutely, in full
-detail, Yoga and the other teachings (or the various kinds of Yoga) of
-the two stages of the road.... ལ་ has then the force of: with regard,
-reference to; as far as ... is concerned.
-
-In l. 17 the ‘till’ ought to be more emphatically rendered: until the
-very moment that, i.e. I shall not cease a moment before. Or else: till
-I reach the very heart of saintship. See J. s.v. བར་.
-
-In l. 49 ‘May all those’ is more correct than ‘May all of you,’ for,
-unlike in the three preceding verses which are addressed to his pupils,
-the author now utters a universal prayer addressed to mankind in
-general.
-
-Note to p. 2. Waddell, Lāmaist Graces before Meat, J.R.A.S., 1894, p.
-265, says that the libation is sprinkled with the tips of the fore and
-middle fingers. This is denied by my informants who maintain their
-statement as given on p. 2, above.
-
-To p. 4. After the Introduction was in print I have seen a copy of the
-དགའ་ལྡན་ལྷ་བརྒྱ་མ་, ‘The Galdan Century of Gods,’ and had it copied for me.
-It is a small prayer-book to Tsoṅ kʽa pa, who manifests in a hundred
-different forms, and it contains 18 four-lined stanzas of 9 syllables
-each, with the single exception of the stanza quoted in the
-Introduction, which contains five lines.
-
-This little book is the one mentioned in the Hor chos byuṅ (Huth’s
-translation, p. 387—see note 5—, and text p. 246). Huth gives as Sk.
-equivalent for the title: Tushitadevaçatikā. Galdan (Tushita) is here
-the heaven of that name, not the famous monastery. The stanza we are
-discussing is also mentioned in the same passage. Its name is དམིགས་བརྩེ་
-མ་ (The unfathomable love verse). This Dmigs brtse ma is of
-considerable theological importance. I possess a commentary on it
-written by བློ་བཟང་བསྐལ་བཟང་རྒྱ་མཚོ་, the seventh Dalai Lama. Grünwedel, in
-the list of Dalai Lamas on p. 206 of his ‘Mythologie,’ etc., writes སྐལ་
-ལྡན་ and Rockhill, in ‘Tibet, a ... sketch derived from Chinese
-sources,’ J.R.A.S., Vol. XXIII, new series, 1891, p. 287, སྐལ་བཟང་.
-
-Since, I have also found that this same stanza, with a modification,
-occurs on the title page of Sarat Chandra Das’ edition of the དཔག་བསམ་
-འཁྲི་ཤིང་ (Bibl. Ind.). The stanza as there given consists of six lines,
-by the addition of an initial line to
-
-
- དངོས་གྲུབ་ཀུན་འབྱུང་ཐུབ་དབང་རྡོ་རྗེ་འཆང་ །,
-
-
-i.e. the Thunderbolt-bearer, Vajradhara.
-
-In another little work, the སྤྱན་འདྲེན་ཁྲུས་གསོལ་ཕྱག་མཆོད་ཀྱི་རིམ་པ་སྒོ་གསུམ་མུན་སེལ་,
-‘The illuminator of body, speech and mind concerning the order of
-inviting, lustrating, making obeisance to and worshipping (Tsoṅ kʽa
-pa),’ the stanza occurs once more, again in a different form.
-
-There, p. 9b, the prayer is as in our Introduction, but lacks the third
-line (བདུད་དཔུང་, etc.) and ends with དཔལ་ལ་ཕྱག་ཚལ་ལོ་. Also, instead of
-འཇམ་པའི་དབྱངས་ in the second line, this text writes འཇམ་དཔལ་དབྱངས་.
-
-I am informed that the prayer occurs also in many other books with
-modifications, and that when it is used in connection with ཁྲུས་པ་ or
-‘lustration’ rites the closing words after གྲགས་པའི་ཞབས་ལ་ are changed
-into སྐུ་ཁྲུས་གསོལ་, ‘we baptise thee.’
-
-To p. 17. S. Ch. D., p. 490 b, s.v. གཉན་ཐབ་པ་ mentions a medicinal root
-used against the plague, called ལྕགས་ཀྱ་ (without zhabs-kyu), but
-transcribed lcags kyu.
-
-To p. 23. Huth, Hor chos byuṅ, trs., p.117, renders མཁའ་འགྲོ་ as ḍāka,
-also on p. 118 (see note 4). On p. 231 (see note 1) he suggests that
-མཁའ་འགྲོ་ should be understood as ḍākinī = མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་, not as Sk. ḍāka.
-The dge rgan understands all these three passages as referring to
-(female) ḍākinīs. Though according to Grünwedel (‘Mythologie,’ p. 153)
-in Sk. mythology a male ḍāka exists (a Tantra deity), in Tibet the མཁའ་
-འགྲོ་ is always feminine, and a male species or individual does not exist
-according to my informants. This statement needs testing of course.
-Grünwedel (loc. cit.) thinks that these female ḍākinīs are original
-Tibetan spirits or goddesses. The female ཡེ་ཤེས་མཁའ་འགྲོ་’s are mentioned
-indifferently with or without the final མ་. Macdonell in his Sk. Dict.
-only mentions the feminine form of the word. In the ritual book གཅོད་ཆ་
-དྲུག་ “The six cut off pieces” (i.e. chapters, divisions, into which the
-description of the torma offering is divided) we find the apostrophe:
-ཀྱེ་མ་མི་མིན་ཡེ་ཤེས་ཀྱི་མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་, “O, wisdom fairy, supernatural (= not-human)
-mother,” so defining the sex. In Tibetan the form མཁའ་འགྲོ་ must
-accordingly not be understood as a masculine form of མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་, but as
-its abbreviated form only. This without prejudice to the question
-whether in special Tantric texts a male god Ḍāka, མཁའ་འགྲོ་, does occur.
-
-S. Ch. D. has for མཁའ་འགྲོ་ an entry giving the meanings ‘god, bird,
-arrow.’ Here the word has a poetical or metaphorical meaning based on
-its etymology, ‘sky-goer’, but no mythological value. He adds under
-མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་ ‘a class, mainly of female spirits.’ But the form in མ་
-cannot be masculine. In Tibet there is a class of people called ཆོས་རྗེ་,
-both male and female, whose name may be translated as oracles, shamans
-or mediums. They are deemed to be obsessed by ཆོས་སྐྱོང་’s who speak
-through them whilst they themselves are in a state of trance or
-obsession. Their name is ཆོས་རྗེ་ in Lhasa and other greater towns, and
-amongst the more educated; but the country-people and the lower orders
-have a special name for these mediums if they are women and call them
-རྣལ་འབྱོར་མ་ or མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་. In Sikkhim the word མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་ is general in
-this sense. In Sikkhim the designation for a male medium of this sort
-is དཔའ་བོ་ and not ཆོས་རྗེ་ as in Tibet.
-
-Whilst investigating the question of Khandomas from the standpoint of
-colloquial Tibetan I stumbled unexpectedly on the following interesting
-piece of information, throwing a vivid sidelight on some current
-beliefs and practices of modern Tibet.
-
-The abbot of the Saskya monastery is held to be the reincarnation of
-Padmasambhava. As the latter was the great ‘binder,’ that is subduer,
-of all spirits, witches, goblins and other creatures of that ilk, the
-Saskya abbot has in some way become the official head and master of all
-Tibetan witches. Belief in witches is rife all over Tibet, and any
-woman is liable to be declared one. The process is very simple. If a
-great Lama receives obeisance from the multitude he presents the
-devotees in return with a ‘protection-knot’ (སྲུང་མདུད་), a narrow strip
-of cloth which he puts round their necks. He ties a knot in it
-muttering some mantram over it, hence the name. Ordinary laymen receive
-a white strip, tapas or those who have their hair cut short (probably
-because they look like tapas) get a yellow or red strip, but if a woman
-approaches whom the Lama by his magic knowledge recognizes as a witch,
-she receives a black strip. From that moment she is irrevocably a witch
-and no protestation can help her out of the situation. In the Saskya
-monastery an annual feast or ceremony is celebrated in which all
-witches must appear personally, and the magic then displayed is so
-tremendously powerful that all women who are secretly endowed with the
-powers of witchcraft without the people knowing it, are irresistibly
-compelled to attend the meeting. They simply cannot help it, and so
-stories are told of witches working in the fields, milking cows, or
-otherwise engaged, being drawn away from their work and appearing in
-the assembly with their milk-pail, or spindle, or whatever utensil they
-were using at the time at any work, when they were forced to quit it
-and to come to Saskya. In the meeting they are then officially
-proclaimed witches and forced to pledge allegiance and obedience to the
-Saskya monastery and its head. Then the profitable and practical side
-of the transaction becomes manifest, for henceforth they have to pay an
-annual, heavy witch-tax, and in cases known to Karma himself, who came
-across them when living in Tibet, this tax amounted to one རྡོ་ཚད་ (see
-Bell, p. 104) or about Rs. 120 a year. On the other hand they are now
-protected by the authority of the monastery as long as they pay the
-tax, though they have to pledge themselves not to use their powers for
-evil. Then they receive the official title of ས་སྐྱ་མཁའ་འགྲོ་, though they
-are known to the people as འབའ་མོ་, witch. But this latter word is a
-term of abuse or contempt. The meaning of the two terms, however, is
-the same. The entries in the dicts. s.v. འབའ་མོ་ and པོ་ (and other
-spellings) need proper testing in the light of the above. These witches
-are supposed not to live up to a great age but to die young, because
-the monastery calls them out of life to become protecting spirits of
-the monastery in the invisible spheres. When a bamo dies, her daughter,
-if she has any, inherits the office or quality of the mother. These
-bamos, during life, follow the ordinary occupations of women: buying,
-selling, working or marrying, and their bamo-hood seems to be no
-drawback, in itself, to their matrimonial prospects. I heard of the
-case of a bamo who was the wife of a very wealthy man. But the tax, far
-in excess of any levied on ordinary people, must be regularly paid. If
-the bamo does not pay her tax, the monastery calls her soul and she
-dies. In the gompa for every accredited འབའ་མོ་ there is a སོབ་ or
-stuffed effigy, puppet, of which I have not been able to get a full
-description. Probably a stuffed doll or body, with a mask and garment,
-perhaps only a stick to hold the mask and garment up, like in a
-puppet-show. Each such puppet becomes the dwelling-place of the soul of
-a dead bamo when she dies, and in order to see to it that after death
-she may not do harm whilst roaming about, the puppet is bound in
-chains. Horrible to say, however, sometimes these chains are found
-broken by the guardians, and this is a sure sign that the imprisoned
-soul has escaped from the puppet which was its dwelling-place and that
-it may have started on a pilgrimage of evil works. As soon as it is
-found that such an imprisoned witch-soul has escaped, solemn notice is
-at once sent out to all Tibet to the effect that a bamo-soul has broken
-loose from Saskya, and the various local Lamas all through the country
-warn their flocks that a bamo is at large and enjoin them to be careful
-not to fall a victim to the wandering witch. So, for instance, they are
-told not to go about alone after dark, not to entertain strangers, and
-the like, for the bamo may assume any disguise, and any man may fall a
-prey to the snares of a beautiful strange woman, as any woman might be
-allured by an unknown man. The late Lama Sherabgyamtsho in Ghoom, whose
-name is so well known to all students of Tibetan, used very often to
-make solemn announcements of this nature and warn the Ghoom people that
-a bamo had escaped from Saskya.
-
-A most fitting ending to this story is perhaps to be made by quoting
-the old Buddhist formula “Thus I have heard,” but there is no doubt
-that the word མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་ acquires an interesting new meaning through
-this curious tale.
-
-There is a belief prevalent in Tibet that in every woman a touch of
-bamo-hood is latent (some philosophers, also outside Tibet, seem to
-think the same!), but in the night of the 29th day of the twelfth
-Tibetan month, this seed of evil will manifest most fully. The male
-Tibetans, however, seem not to take any precautions or perform any
-rites to counteract the sinister influence of this date. Evidently it
-is a male Tibetan who first set up this theory, and it might be the
-same fellow who is the author of the following proverb which bears on
-our subject and on the words we are dealing with. It runs:
-
-
- སྐྱེས་དམན་བརྒྱ་ལ་མཁའ་འགྲོ་གཅིག་
- ཁྱོ་ག་བརྒྱ་ལ་འབའ་པོ་གཅིག་
-
- Amongst a hundred women (at most) one khando!
- Amongst a hundred men (at most) one sorcerer!
-
-
-That is—khando being here used in the good sense of fairy—: Amongst
-many women there is scarcely one extremely good, but amongst many men
-there is scarcely one extremely bad. In fact, in Tibet, all women are
-suspected of having just a little seed of evil (of the witch) in them.
-And so the term of reproach is not as in Europe ‘Old Adam’ but rather
-‘Old Eve.’
-
-As far as the above story is concerned, it should not be forgotten that
-it is only a popular version of an interesting phase of religious
-practice, but Tibetan casuistry and theology are as a rule so subtle
-and well-systematised that a more theoretical exposition of the
-doctrines and practices alluded to might throw considerably more, if
-not other and new, light on the subject.
-
-To p. 25. The quotation, s.v. ཁྲེལ་བ༌, l. 16: ཆོས་ཐོས་པས་, etc., is from a
-little tract, a prayer to Padmasambhava, entitled བསམ་པ་མྱུར་འགྲུབ་མ་, ‘the
-quick mind-fulfiller.’
-
-To p. 25. Cf. Lewin, pp. 133–134, no. 97–10, གཞད་གད་ (རྒྱུ་), ridiculous;
-zhed-ked, laughter, ridicule.
-
-To p. 26. ངོ་ཚ་བ་ Bell, voc., to blush; Lewin, p. 77 (64–5), ridiculous.
-See his example.
-
-To p. 30. S. Ch. D., Dict., has ཀོ་ཀོ་ (hidden on p. 34, out of
-alphabetical order) as ‘a Tibetan of mixed breed, i.e. born of a
-Chinese father and a Tibetan mother.’ Waddell, Lhasa and its Mysteries,
-p. 214, the same explanation. A special enquiry into this point,
-however, yielded a different result. One of my informants was a Tibetan
-woman from Lhasa who had herself married a Chinaman there, and so ought
-to know. The half-breeds referred to by S. Ch. D. and Waddell are
-called ‘baizhin,’ spelling uncertain, given as བལ་བཞིན་ and བའི་ཞིན་, said
-to be a Chinese word. However, another explanation of that same word
-was given, as a man not in the pay of, not taking wages from, another.
-Not necessarily rich or of high position, but independent. Perhaps
-something like crofter. This latter explanation is, however,
-contradicted by Karma who has relations amongst the baizhins in Tibet.
-
-In a Tibetan mixed marriage such as we are here considering the custom
-is to call the elder son ཀོ་ཀོ་ after the Chinese manner, instead of
-using the Tibetan word. This is ཨ་ཇོ་ in Tsang and ཇོ་ཇོ་ in Lhasa. The
-latter is pronounced, and sometimes written, ཅོ་ཅོ་ and even sometimes
-pronounced chö-cho, as if written ཅོས་ཅོ་. But in the above case ཀོ་ཀོ་
-means really ‘elder brother.’ A girl, born in such a marriage, is
-similarly called མི་མི་, Chinese, instead of ཨ་ཆེ་, Tibetan. These terms
-do not mean half-blood. Whether མི་མི་ is used for the eldest daughter
-alone or for all the daughters of the marriage I could not ascertain.
-
-It is said that every Chinaman, however humble, becomes at once a
-personage of importance when in Tibet, and demands to be addressed at
-least as དཔོན་པོ་, Mister, Sir (as every European becomes automatically a
-Sahib in India), and feels quite insulted if addressed by the more
-familiar ཀོ་ཀོ་ as a liberty taken with his dignity. A Chinaman from
-Tibet, however, denied this. I remember once travelling in the Sunda
-country with my Javanese writer who met several people on the road whom
-he knew and whom he saluted as ‘little brother’ or ‘elder brother.’ I
-was puzzled at his belonging to so big a family, but found the solution
-of the riddle when I understood that this fraternity was not one of
-consanguinity at all. So ‘elder sister’ amongst Tibetans means only
-Madam, Lady, or a polite word of address to any woman of more than low
-status in life. In German Mütterchen for any old woman of simple
-status.
-
-To pp. 35–37. The expression ཀུན་ཏུ་བཟང་པོས་བརྒྱན་པའི་ཞིང་ occurring in the
-little prayer-book བཟང་སྤྱོད་ can hardly mean ‘a field (= heaven, world)
-which Kuntuzangpo has adorned’ (beautified, decorated, embellished), in
-the sense in which one may decorate a house or room, with beautiful
-pictures, furniture, etc. It must surely be understood as ‘the heaven
-blazing with the glory of Kuntuzangpo’s presence in it,’ a heaven
-resplendent with his glory. In other words, he adorns it by his mere
-being there, but not as the result of some activity expressed by a
-transitive verb. The world is adorned, but has not been decorated or
-beautified. I wonder if the agentive case པོས་ may be understood as in
-English expressions like: ‘happy through him,’ ‘blazing with diamonds,’
-‘laughing for joy,’ and the like.
-
-To p. 40. See the unusual explanation of ཅེས་པ་ in S. Ch. D., s.v. ག་
-III, where he translates ཅེས་པའོ་ as ‘it may be said.’ The dge rgan,
-however, paraphrases the expression here as ལབ་པ་རེད་ or ལབ་གི་འདུག་, or
-ཅེས་སྨྲས་སོ་, which gives it another meaning, namely: ‘so it has been
-said,’ ‘so is the teaching,’ ‘that is what has been taught.’ In this
-sense the previous words are a direct quotation and the ཅེས་པའོ་ cannot
-be translated as ‘it may be said that.’
-
-To p. 40. In the note to ཆགས་སྡང་, for འདོད་ཆགས་དང་ཞེ་སྡང་, non-attachment
-and indifference only in connection with a negative.
-
-To p. 44. ལྟ་བ་. See Graham Sandberg, Tibet and the Tibetans, p. 268,
-who renders this word, as a technical term denoting the first of the
-four stages of meditation, according to Milaraspa, as ‘contemplation’
-or ‘concentration.’ The second word, denoting a mental action
-unconnected with visual experience, does not seem appropriate. As in
-English ‘view’ has both a physical and a mental meaning, so in Tibetan
-ལྟ་བ་, as a verb, has mental connotations. J. has the word as sbst.
-‘mystical contemplation.’ The Sk. equivalent, दर्शन, is likewise both
-physical and mental in meaning. Whereas J. and S. Ch. D. have a sbst.
-ལྟ་བ་ ‘the act of looking,’ and ‘a look,’ Desg. has it as ‘sight’
-(visus, vue, “etc.”).
-
-To p. 58. See Jäschke’s note on maṇḍa and maṇḍala, s.v. དཀྱིལ་, p. 11 b.
-His remark may have a bearing on the question of ḍāka and ḍākinī,
-discussed above. See next note.
-
-To pp. 59 and 60. My informants, though ignorant about the detail of
-five and nine cushions, do know of a custom requiring the man of higher
-social position, greater age, more prestige, to be seated on a higher
-seat as a sign of respect. The difference of height, however, is in the
-seat itself, not effected by the placing of a number of cushions on
-seats of equal height.
-
-To གདན་ still the two following words: རྟ་གདན་, saddle cloth, and ཁ་
-གདན་, second sheet, upper sheet, covering sheet over the འབོལ་གདན་. The
-འབོལ་གདན་ is usually thick and rough but the ཁ་གདན་ thin and of finer
-texture, like in European beds the bed sheet over the mattress. The
-འབོལ་གདན་ is for softness and the ཁ་གདན་ for cleanliness, like the loose
-covers of armchairs and sofas in Western countries.
-
-To p. 62. Huth, Hor chos byuṅ, trs. 117, note 4, reconstitutes the name
-Blo bzaṅ grags pai dpal into Sk. Matibhadrakīrtiçrī. In Tibetan
-mantrams, however, where Tsoṅ kʽa pa’s name is given in its Sk. form,
-Sumati is used and not Matibhadra. See also p. 5 of the Introduction,
-supra.
-
-To p. 64. The word དམིགས་མེད་ (p. 3 and additional note to p. 4) should
-have been discussed there. Desg. alone has the meaning of the word as
-in our text: unthinkable, unimaginable. According to oral information,
-synonymous with བསམ་མི་ཁྱབ་, l. 12, see p. 74, supra.
-
-The elaborate entries in J. and S. Ch. D. under this word and under
-དམིགས་པ་མེད་པ་ need investigation.
-
-The word དམིགས་པ་ has also a special meaning, not in the dictionaries,
-in connection with any action done ‘in thought,’ དམིགས་པ་བྱེད་པ་ (as in
-English ‘I am with you in thought’). But Tibetans can not only be
-present in thought but they can give presents ‘in thought,’ and do all
-sorts of things ‘in thought,’ when there is no physical possibility of
-doing so in the flesh. So the good story is told of a lazy Lama who, to
-get rid of the crowd, said: “And now I give my hand-blessing to you all
-‘in thought,’” whereupon a disappointed and angry pilgrim answered:
-“Well, then I give you my butter-offerings, which I have brought with
-me, also ‘in thought.’”
-
-To p. 65. The dictionaries spelt པོ་ཏ་ལ་ but the dge rgan says that པོ་ཏཱ་
-ལ་ also occurs. Desg. has an alternative spelling པོ་ཌ་ལ་, but this
-seems a misprint for པོ་ཊ་ལ་. In Tibetan books I have only seen ཏ་ but
-the dge rgan is sure that the two spellings, ཊ་ and ཏཱ་ (but not ཊཱ་),
-occur as well.
-
-To the text. When the larger part of this booklet was in print I
-acquired an additional copy of the text, which proved to be different
-from the two editions used by me. It is of the same size and style as
-edition A, but printed from other blocks. We call it C. The copy is a
-poor one, badly printed from worn-out blocks. A collation brought no
-news of importance. The reading ངེས་སོ་ in l. 16, however, is confirmed
-by this edition. Its only new reading is འཆིང་བར་ for འཆང་བར་ in l. 46.
-This reading does not seem so satisfactory as the one we have followed.
-The full result of the collation is given below. Indistinct readings
-are marked with a note of interrogation.
-
-
- C. l. 13. འཛིན་བའི་? for པའི་
- l. 18. གཏོགས་བར་ ” པར་
- l. 24. བརྩོན་པ་ ” པར་
- l. 29. ཀུན་སླང་ ” སློང་
- l. 30. མཆན་? ” མཚན་
- l. 41. བཤེས་གཉེན་ང་? ” པ་
- l. 44. འདུག་བའི་ ” པའི་
- l. 46. འཆིང་ ” འཆང་
- l. 50. རྔེས་ ” རྗེས་
- l. 51. རྟོགས་ངའི་ ” པའི་
- Colophon. གདུངས་ ” གདུང་
- ” བཀྲ་ཤིས་ ” desunt.
-
-
-The variants of ll. 30, 41, 50 and 51 are evidently due to
-deterioration of the blocks. There is no ༈ in this edition.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ERRATA.
-
-
- p. 7: first variant, bottom, read: སྙེག་.
- p. 8: l. 20 of text, insert asterisk after བརྩེ་.
- p. 9: second variant, bottom, read: འཁྲེལ་.
- p. 14, l. 13: teacher (or: teachers).
- p. 14, l. 14: his (or: their).
- p. 25, l. 1: for render read: repay.
- p. 27, l. 20: for render read: repay.
- p. 27, l. 27, 28: eliminate the commas outside the brackets.
- p. 36, l. 4: for Smuck read: Schmuck.
- p. 65, l. 24: for Lhassa read: Lhasa.
- p. 76, l. 24: for ཁྲུས་པ་ read: ཁྲུས་.
- p. 76. l. 25: for baptise read: lustrate.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-
-[1] l. 2 B སྙག་
-
-[2] l. 5 B པའི་
-
-[3] l. 7 A 1 and 2 བར་
-
-[4] l. 7 B དྲིན་
-
-[5] l. 10 B པ་
-
-[6] l. 16 A 1 and 2 both ངས་. Text from B
-
-[7] l. 16 B closes the line with a ༈ instead of ༎
-
-[8] l. 17 B དེང་
-
-[9] l. 18 B པ་
-
-[10] l. 19 B ནས་
-
-[11] l. 20 A 2 བརྩ་
-
-[12] l. 22 B བས་
-
-[13] l. 24 A 1 and 2 བཙོན་
-
-[14] l. 24 B པ་
-
-[15] l. 26 B ཅིང་
-
-[16] l. 29 B ཕུང་
-
-[17] l. 29 A 2 སླང་
-
-[18] l. 32 B ཀྱང་
-
-[19] l. 32 B འཁྲལ་
-
-[20] l. 34 B བསྒྲུབ་
-
-[21] l. 35 B ཁྲུག་
-
-[22] l. 37 A 1 and 2 ཐཔས་
-
-[23] l. 38 B འཆད་
-
-[24] l. 40 B སྐྱེལ་བཞིན་ instead of གཏོང་བ་
-
-[25] l. 41 B རྣམས་
-
-[26] l. 42 B སོམས་
-
-[27] l. 43 B སྦྱོངས་
-
-[28] l. 44 B last three words in B བདག་འཛིན་ཐུལ་
-
-[29] l. 45 A 1 and B བོ་
-
-[30] l. 45 B ཀུན་
-
-[31] l. 46 last four words in B བར་མི་བྱེད་པར་
-
-[32] l. 47 A 2 བླ་
-
-[33] l. 48 4 2 བོར་
-
-[34] l. 48 B has ༈ at the end of the line instead of ༎
-
-[35] l. 49 B ཀུན་
-
-[36] Colophon, A 2 has no ཅད་ after ཐམས་, and has a final ས་ to གདུངས་.
-B has a different colophon འདི་བྞ་ཆེན་དགེ་འདུན་གྲུབ་ཀྱིས་མཛད་པའོ ༎
-
-
-
-
-
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