1922.] A Contribution to the Bibliography of Tibet. 495 
y5, avadana of the blue-throat Bird, Moon, with perfect 
cs} seem called the ear-ornament of those realising the 
orl without end or essence, 144 leaves. This and other 
Dienices between our lists and those of Schmidt and 
Schiefner, show that the taste in reading in Tibet has not 
changed so much in the 75 years which separate the first from 
the last. From a description of the contents told to me by a 
Tibetan friend who had read the book ‘ very long ago’ it would 
appear as if this is a story based on or identical with the Sibi 
Jata 
In the Kanjur (Beckh), mdo, Vol. (Ng (32), there is a 
Candraprabhavadana, FAS DSN ASES I do not 
know whether this story is related to the one mentioned above. 
The question may be settled early, as, by a happy accident, I 
found, after this paper was written, an (uncatalogued) copy 
of this work in the collection of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 
48. oF RAR RI c’ (24). Rise of the (Buddhist) re- 
8 ganenng 
ligion in India. 
Sarat Chandra Das, in his dictionary, gives AWQIO’ 
~ 
as a class of works. Dr. Thomas mentions four works of this 
class. One by Taranitha, edited by Schiefner, one by Bu- 
ston (Wassiliew, p. 361), and two without author’s name. 
(Peking, No. 236° and Csoma de Kérés, p. 148) It is interest- 
ing to know that in Tibet ANAC works are still current 
enough to be included in the present lists. 
49, ial q ‘AAW ans Q" aqAYS AQH (13). The 
same as No. 25 here. Namthar. Gelukpa. 
50. Jal 2" 55] ea) a AT AgS" (14). The works of 
Gendiindub. The rst Dalai Lama, not the second, above 
No. 42. Of a one volume Tashilhunpo rae; clearly print- 
ed, there are now three copies in Calcu One in the Im- 
perial Library. one in the University Tie ho and one in my 
Private collection. See No. 80. 
= * . * 
Si, a) fan en Wl QIN (12). The works of the 
fifth Dalai Lama, ie. Ngakwanglozanggyatsho, nayaan 
FIC AS. Though this head of the Church presided 
