§ 217.] 
ADDENDA TO CHAPTER VIII. 
79 
212 . sRfsr, the poet Debl Das, of Bundel’khand . 
FI. 1685 A.D. 
In the above year he was already a prolific author, and went to 
the court of king Ratan Pat Siygh, of Karau/i, where he remained 
till his death. He wrote under that king’s name a moral work entitled 
Prem Ratnakar, which is said to be of rare excellence. 
2i3. ^rf^r ^ the poet Chandr ’ the younger. B. 1692 A.D. 
He attended the court of BandCW Babu, of Bhupal, brother to 
Sul’tan Path an, Hawab of Raj’gar h. He wrote a commentary on the 
Sat Sal of Biharl (Ho. 196) in the Kundaliya metre under the name 
of Sultan Pathan. 
•• •• 
There is another mediocre poet of the same name, about whom Sib 
Siggh gives no particulars. 
214. Sul’tan Hawab Muhammad Khan alias 
Sul’tan Pathan, of Raj’garh, in Bhupal . B. 170//. A.D. 
He was a patron of poets, and the poet Chandr ’ the younger 
(Ho. 213) wrote in his name a commentary to the Sat Sal of Biharl 
(Ho. 196) in the Kundaliya metre. 
215. Wftrra Raja Gopal Saran . B. 1691 A.D. 
His principal work is a commentary on the Sat Sal of Biharl 
(Ho. 196), entitled Prabandh Ghat’nd. 
216. the poet Motl Ram . B. 1683 A.D. 
Haj. Author of the Braj version of the novel Madhonal, translated 
into Hindustani by Lallu Jl Lai (Ho. 629) and Maz’har ‘All Khan 
Wild . See Garcin de Tassy, i, 351, for further particulars. 
217. TR? Ghagh, of Kanauj, in the Doab. B. 1696 A.D. 
He was an agricultural poet, whose aphorisms have a wide authority 
all over Horthern India. A number of them are inserted in Bihar 
Peasant Life. Poets in the same style, but of a more local (Eastern) 
reputation, were Bhaddar and Dak. 
