120 Captain James Low on Buppa and the Phrabdt. 
No. 92. 
Sri Watchocha. The Siamese P,ho-ring Kéo, or diamond ornament. 
No. 93. 
Nati yacha. The Siamese So-vin Kéo, or diamond garden. 
No. 94. 
Sawatt,héko. The Siamese name for this part of a princely wardrobe is 
Sae Kha Khrang. 
No. 95. 
Watalo. K,hun Thon, as the Siamese call it, is a part of the head-dress 
which falls down and covers the nape of the neck. 
No. 96. 
Tra D,hama Nancha. The Siamese Do-ring Kéo Mant. 
The “inestimable jewel,” the type of mental illumination, the Hindu 
Kasebiith, which shone refulgent to enlighten the earth from the sacred 
breast of NARAYANA. 
NOTES. 
Wuere Scandinavian mythology is alluded to, the remarks have been taken from 
an article on the elder Edda, &c. in No. VIII. of the Foreign Quarterly Review. 
The Horse. Bauper of the Scandinavians had his horse, called SLEIPNER, which, 
with all its trappings, was cast into the funeral pile. The Greeks had their white 
horse, Eos, careering round Olympus. 
Siva’s chariot of victory was dragged by the seven-headed horse of the sun.* 
Maha Meru. The Scandinavian cosmogony is closely allied to that of the Bud- 
dhists of Ava and Siam. In the former, the earth rests on, or is encompassed by water. 
There was the hill, Asgad; also, the rainbow bridge, which, like Inpra’s ladder of 
gold, was the medium of communication between earth and heaven. ‘There were on 
the hill Asgad, in Valdhall, the abodes of the Aser, the Hindu Assur, or perhaps 
* Lieut.-Colonel Tod’s Méwar. 
