INDEX. 393 



Dhuboy purgunna, ii. 293. Account of the villages, cultivation, and produce, ii. 



345. Dreadful state of the country on the English taking possession, iii. 262. 



Improvement in three years, iii. 264. 

 Diamonds, some magnificent stones described, iii, 84. 

 Diana's Peak, on St. Helena, iv. 257- 

 Dilla-mount, or Mount Dilly, near Tellicherry i. 315. 

 Dil-Gusha, Heart's delight, or expansion, iii. 172. Favourite gardens at Cambay, 



172. Elegant entertainment there by the nabob, 173. 

 Dinapore cantonments, iv. 90. 

 Diodorus Siculus, his account of the Egyptians, i. 285. Of an Indian widow, 



i. 287- 

 Dissimulation, a prevailing trait in the Indian character, ii. 133. 

 Distichs ; ingenuity and beauty of the Persian distichs, iii. 1X8. Several translated 



180. 

 Distillery in the Concan, i. 196. 

 Divination, singular instance at Dhuboy, ii. 364. 

 Dohud, a town in Malwa, iii. 481. 

 Dolcah, in Guzerat, iii. 162. 

 Dolepoor, in Malwa, iv. 36. 



Dolphin, Dorado, beauty of this fish dying, i. 10. 

 Domus, village near Surat, ii. 7- 

 Don Frederic, governor of Goa, iv. 408. 

 Dova, Deway, iron mines in Malwa, iv. 24. 

 Douab, the Delta of India, iv. 78. 

 Dowlah Gaum, in Malwa, iv. 23. 

 Dowlat Roy, Dessoy of Baroche, letter from, iii. 358. His situation under the Mah- 



ratta government, 468. 

 Druids, their worship and sacred groves, similar to the Hindoos, ii. 513. Remark by 



Julius Cassar, iv. 314. 

 Durbar, etiquette at a Mogul court, ii. 15. 



or palace at Zinore built of mud, ii. 518. 



Durbar tent, Mahratta peshwa's, described, ii. 44. 

 Durmapatam island near Tellicherry, i. 318. 

 Dutajee, a Mahratta chief, his exploits, iii. 353. 

 Dutch farmers, in the interior of Africa, ii. 175. 



Earthen-ware boats of Juvenal explained, iii. 55. 



East Gate at Dhuboy, its sanctity, beauty, and costliness, ii. 330; illustrated by a 

 passage from Ezekiel, 331 ; as a place of public resort for the citizens, ibid, com- 

 pared with Homer, 332. 

 VOL. IV. 3 E 



