1922.] A Contribution to the Bibliography of Tibet. 469 
graphy of 
8. Gaur Das Bysack. Notes on a Buddhist Monastery 
at Bhot Bagan (Howrah), on two rare and valuable Tibetan 
MSS. discovered there, etc. J.A.S.B., Vol. 49, Part I, for 1890 
(1891), pp. 50-99, with two plates. 
See also Proceedings of the A.S.B. for January 1889, 
pp. 8-12, on this subject. 
Besides the above collections in European and Indian 
hands, there are, of course, the monastery and private collec- 
tions in Ladakh and in and around Sikhim. Bhutan, being 
practically inaccessible, need not be mentioned. Ladakh is 
rather out of the way for most students, but Darjeeling and 
its neighbourhood are next-door to Calcutta. 
In the Darjeeling, the Ghoom and the Gying (AIC) 
monasteries (the two latter each a few miles from Darjeeling) 
there are Kanjurs (Narthang), but no Tanjurs. m 
pong monastery there is only a Bum. In the Sikhim monas- 
teries there is said to be material which it would be worth 
In the Nepalese Durbar Library at Katmandu (or in an- 
other library in that place?) there is at least a Tanjur, and 
this copy seems to be another than the Narthang print as it 
does not contain a certain text incorporated in this. 
b. Booksellers. 
“yp 
ised book-trade for scientific purposes is still in a primitive 
Europe. It would be impossible to give, or even attempt to 
a8 a practical branch of Orientalism, in the same sense as 
Science is classed as Pure and Applied, without difference in 
rinciple. 
