1868.] The Poems of Chand Barclay. 121 



16. Belabyah. 



17. Alhan Kanaujte Maliobeko gaman. 



18. G-andhau Alhan juddli tatlia Mahilko Gliorinko dand karna. 



19. Kalysnr pi'ija Alhan sapna. 



20. Alha Mahobe nist Lakhan Talhan saint. 

 • 21. Rup Brahma. 



22. Prithiraj Parmal do kos antar apna mantrain. 



23. Paninko bida Kalinjarko kaian. 



24. Raja Parmal Kalinjar gaman. 



25. Talhan vadha. 



26. Lakhan Talhan vadha. 



27. Alhan Arahma sambad. 



28. Udal Sanjam Ray jnddh. 



29. Udal-kanh sangrani. 

 80. Udal vadha. 



31. Raja Parmal srap. 



32. Alhabardan. 



33. Chanhan Chandel scna. 



34. Jaganak Devapur gaman. 



35. Brahmajit Kumar vadha. 



36. Goraklmath darsan. 



37. Alha jogarth Goraklmath sang Kalinjar gaman. 



38. Chand bhavishya varnana. 



Sir H. Elliot, in his Bibliographical Index, has a note apropos to 

 Rashid-u-din's mention of Kajraha, which may be here quoted as 

 bearing on Cantos I and II. " Kajraha. Its real name is Kajrai, on 

 the banks of the Ken, between the Chatterpur and Panna, said to have 

 been founded by the great parent of the Chandel race. The ruined 

 temples of Kajrai are of great antiquity and interest. They are 

 described in the Mahoba Sama, and there said to have been built by 

 Hamoti, upon the occasion of her having held a Banda jag, or 

 penitential sacrifice. She had committed a little faux pas with the 

 moon in human shape, and, as a self-imposed punishment for her 

 indiscretion, held a Banda jag, a part of which ceremony consists in 

 sculpturing indecent representations on the walls of temples, and 

 holding up ones own foibles to the disgust and ridicule of the world. 

 Hamoti was the daughter of Hemraj, spiritual adviser to Indraji, 

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