158 
THE MODERN LITERARY HISTORY OF HINDPSTlN. 
[§ 726. 
726. the poet 
Sib Par'sann, aSak’dwIpI Brahman, of 
Ram’nagar, district Barabagki. Alive 
in 1883. 
727. sm Ram 
Dds, a Baniya, of Birapur, district 
Barabagki. Alive in 1883. 
728. \Gunakar 
Tripathi, of Kantha, district Unao. 
Alive in 1883. 
He writes in Sanskrit and in the 
vernacular. His family is famed for 
its knowledge of astronomy. 
729. Sukh Ram , a 
Brahman, of Chauhattari, district 
Unao. Alive in 1883. 
He is possibly the same as a Sukh 
Ram Kabi mentioned by Sib Siggh as 
B. (P FI.) 1844 A.D. and as an 
erotic poet. 
730. the bard Debi 
Din, of Bil’gram, district Har’dol. Alive 
in 1883. 
His best works are a Nakh’sikh 
(see note to No, 87) and the Rets. 
dar’pan. 
731. *ncrr ^ Mata Dm 
Sukal, of Aj’gara, district Par’tap’garh. 
Alive in 1883. • 
He attends the court of Raja Ajit 
Siggh, of Par’tap’garh. Some verses 
by him, entitled Gyan Dohabctli, will 
be found in the Bhakhd Sar of Sahib 
Prasad Siggh. 
732. Kanhaiya 
Bakhsh the Bals, of Bais’iuara {Audh). 
Alive in 1883. 
His best work is in the quietistic 
style. 
733. fSift «T», Giri Dhari 
Bhat, of Man Ranipura, in district 
Jhansi, Gundel’khand. Alive in 1883 . 
734. the bard Jab’rSs, 
of Bundel’khand. Alive in 1883. 
a • 
735. flnf 7 , Raj a Ran 
Dhlr Siggh, Sir’maur, of Sigg’ra Mau. 
Alive in 1883. 
Besides being a patron of poets, he 
is author of the Kabya Ratnakar 
(written 1840 A.D.) and the Bhukhan 
Kaumudi (written 1860 A.D.). There 
are many towns of the name of Mau 
in India, but I have been unable to 
identify that named as above by Sib 
Siggh. 
736. -finr ^?an dit S b 
alias Raghu Nath, a Brahman, of RasQl - 
abad. Alive in 1883. 
The author of the Bhabamahimna 
and other works. Possibly the same 
as a Sib Din Kabi mentioned by Sib 
Siggh without particulars. There 
are several towns of the name of 
Rasulabad in India. I do not know 
which is the one above referred to. 
737. TTR Ram /Vara- 
yan, a Kayasth. Alive in 1883. 
An erotic poet. He is Munshi to 
Maharaj Man Siggh (No. 699). 
738. Ambika 
Par’sad. Alive in 1883 A.D. 
He belongs to the Shahabad dis¬ 
trict, and is the author of numerous 
songs in the Bhoj’puri dialect, which 
are not of great merit, but are valu¬ 
able as samples of the author’s 
mother tongue. A number are given 
in Part II of Seven Grammars of 
the Bihar Dialects. 
739. f*TTrc^ 
Kali Par’sad Tivuari, of Banaras. 
Alive in 1888. 
This gentleman is Head Pandit of 
the Jhaugahj City School, in Pat'na. 
He is the author of several school¬ 
books, and of a Bhakha Ramayan, 
in mixed Hindi prose and verse, in 
