[Contents]MMadana Bālasarasvatī, author of thePārijātamañjarī,256.Madanamālā, a hetaera,134.Madanamañjarī, and a Kāpālika,193, n.2;a hetaera,261.Madanavatī, a female character,260.Madanikā, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Madayantikā, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193.Mādhava, author of theSubhadrāharaṇa,268,342,357.Mādhava, hero of theMālatīmādhava,62,139,187ff.,306,308.Mādhavasena, a prince,147.Madhuka, a seer,99.Madhusūdana, redactor of theMahānāṭaka,270,271, n.1,272.Madhyama, in theMadhyamavyāyoga,96.Madness, of Purūravas, as a dramatic motif,150.Magadhavatī, a hetaera,84.Māgha, poet (date, Jacobi, SBAW., 1923, p. 214),284.Magic,111,234.Magic arts, in theRatnāvalī,172,173;in thePriyadarçikā,174;in theNāgānanda,175.Magic gazelle, in the Rāma legend,221.Magic ring, conferring invisibility,101,112.Magicians, tricks of,112,172,173,176,234.Mahādeva, author of theAdbhutadarpaṇa,246,247.Mahādeva, father of Jayadeva,244.Mahākāla, deity of Ujjayinī,186.Mahākavi, ancestor of Bhavabhūti,186.Mahānindaka, a holy man,262.Mahārāja Bhāskaradatta, father of Viçākhadatta,204.Mahārāṇa Meru, of Raypur,270.Māhārāṣṭrī lyric,146.Mahāsena, Pradyota,102,130.Mahāvīra, speech of,87;idol of,254.Mahāvrata rite, relation of, to drama,21,24,26,37,39,45,51,73,112.Mahāyāna school,80;Greek influence on the,58.Mahāyātrika, a comic astrologer,262.Mahendrapāla, of Mahodaya,232.Mahendravikramavarman, an author,93,182–5.Maheçvara, father of Çan̄karalāla,270.Mahiman Bhaṭṭa, writer on poetics,294,322.Mahīpāla, of Mahodaya,232.Māhiṣas, colour of,366.Māhiṣmatī, capital of the Kalacuris,226.Mahomedan influence on decadence of Hindu drama,242,371.Maitreya, a character in theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,259.Maitreya, Cārudatta’sVidūṣaka,139.Makaranda, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193,308,338.Makaranda, friend of Mitrāṇanda,259.Mālatī, in theMālatīmādhava,187ff.,308.Mālava era,144.Mālavikā, heroine of theMālavikāgnimitra,62,63,148,149,158, n.1,159,165,309.Malayaketu, in theMudrārākṣasa,205f.Malayavatī, heroine of theNāgānanda,174,306.Mallikā, heroine of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Mallinātha, commentator on Kālidāsa,145.Mālyavant, minister of Rāvaṇa,189,190,194,227,228,229,233,246.Mammaṭa, writer on poetics,171,295,323,324.Man about town,285.Man of taste,318,368,370.Mandākinī, a magician,257,258.Maṇḍaleçvara Bhaṭṭa, father of Mādhava,268.Mandara, Mount,98.Mandārikā, a friend of aViṭa,264.Mandārikā, a servant,313.Mandasor Praçasti (A.D.473), imitates Kālidāsa,146.Mandodarī, wife of Rāvaṇa,190,246.Maṇicūḍa, legend of,168.Manifestation of affection (narmasphoṭa),327.Maṇika, author of theBhairavānanda,248.Man̄kha, poet,75, n.3,225,259.Manners or styles (vṛttis),12,331,332;in relation to types of dramas,346–51.Manoramā, an attendant in thePriyadarçikā,174,362.Manovatī, acts part of Rambhā,49.Mantharā, a slave woman,189,227,228.Mantragupta, and Kanakalekhā,193, n.2.Manu, censures actors,363.Māra, enemy of the Buddha,180,284.Mārīca, in theÇakuntalā,126,154,158;in the Rāma legend,271.[384]Mārkaṇḍeya, Prākrit grammarian,336.Marriage, celebrated by painting scene of it,102,203.Māruta, hero of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Maruts and Indra, dialogue of,14,19,20.Mārwār, use of Apabhraṅça in,287.Masks, possible use of,365, n.1.Mātali, charioteer of Indra,154,157,160,303,325.Matan̄ga, enemy of Jīmūtavāhana,178.Māthura, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Mathurā, as home of drama,41,70,74.Mathurādāsa, author of theVṛṣabhānujā,257.Mātṛgupta, a poet,291, n.2,232,315, n.1,360.Mātrarāja,seeAnan̄gaharṣa.Matrona, of Greco-Roman drama,65.Mattavilāsa, epithet of Mahendravikramavarman,182.Matters unfit for stage representation,300,301.Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of the Buddha,81,84.Maukhari king, Avantivarman,204.Max Müller, theory of origin of the drama,15.May-day merriment, in England,41.Māyurāja, author ofUdāttarāghava,221,223,297.Māyūrāja, variant of Māyurāja,221, n.1.Megasthenes, refers to the Kordax,42, n.1.Meghanāda, son of Rāvaṇa,190,229,246.Meghaprabhācārya, dramatist,55,269.Mekhalā, a maidservant,235.Melanthos, legend of,37,38.Men, play women’s parts,36,362.Menakā, mother of Çakuntalā,152.Menander, comedy of,60.Menander, king, conquests of,59,60.Mercenary soldiers, reflected in figure ofÇakāra,66.Merchants, or guildsmen, speech of,87,141,336;form of names,313;as heroes of thePrakaraṇa,346;thePrakaraṇikā,348.Meru, Mahārāṇa of Raypur,270.Message, as dramatic device,303.Messenger, of hero,311,312;of heroine,313.Metre, influence of lyrics on,77;of Açvaghoṣa,89,90;Bhāsa,123,124;Mṛcchakaṭikā,142;Kālidāsa,167,168;Harṣa,181;Mahendravikramavarman,185;Bhavabhūti,203;Viçākhadatta,212;BhaṭṭaNārāyaṇa,219;Rājaçekhara,234,236,238;Kṣemīçvara,240;Jayadeva,246;Kṛṣṇamiçra,253;Uddaṇḍin,258;use of, in accord with sentiments,331;in theSamavakāra,346.Mewār, defeat of Jayatala of, by the Mahomedans,249,250.Middle, for active, in Bhāsa,120.Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sanskrit version of,251.Mīlacchrīkāra, a Mahomedan,250.Mildness (mṛdava),329.Miles gloriosus, of Greco-Roman drama,65;Rāvaṇa as a,105.Military spectacle, seeVyāyoga.Mīmāṅsā view of sentiment,316.Mime, Greek, alleged influence of, on Indian drama,67,68.Mimes, in India,49,57.Mimesis, Aristotelian doctrine of,355.Mimetic art,12,296.Mind, movements of, as related to the sentiments,320.Minister, appropriate hero for aPrakaraṇa,306,346;how addressed,314;where placed in the auditorium,370.Mirror of knowledge, an allegorical character,254.Mirth (hāsa), as the basis of the comic sentiment,323.Mise-en-scène,364–9.Mitrāṇanda, hero of theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,258,259.Mitrāvasu, prince of the Siddhas,174,175,178.Miyāṇalladevī, a princess,256.Mlecchas,249,312.Mohanadāsa, commentator on theMahānāṭaka,270.Mōkos, compared withVidūṣaka,67.Mokṣāditya, author of theBhīmavikramavyāyoga,266.Monkey, escape of, as a dramatic motif,175.Monmohan Chakravarti, on date of Kālidāsa,144.Monologue, seeBhāṇa.Moon of Discrimination, an allegorical character,254.Mṛgān̄kalekhā, a hetaera,262.Mṛgān̄kāvalī, a princess,234,235.Mṛgarājalakṣman,212.Mudgala hymn (RV. x.102),18.Muhammad II, of Gujarāt,251.Muktāpīḍa Lalitāditya, of Kashmir, defeats Yaçovarman of Kanyakubja,186.Mūlanāçaka, a barber,261.Munisuvrata, temple of,248.Muñja (A.D.974–95), a king, of Dhārā,292,293.Muralā, a river,191.Murāri, author of theAnargharāghava,225–31,242,244,259,271,352.[385]Mureçvara, a Çaiva ascetic,262,263.Muṣṭika, slain by Kṛṣṇa,100,110.Music,16,25,44,49,50,291,292,339,350,351,352.Mystery of things, in Bhavabhūti,195.
[Contents]MMadana Bālasarasvatī, author of thePārijātamañjarī,256.Madanamālā, a hetaera,134.Madanamañjarī, and a Kāpālika,193, n.2;a hetaera,261.Madanavatī, a female character,260.Madanikā, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Madayantikā, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193.Mādhava, author of theSubhadrāharaṇa,268,342,357.Mādhava, hero of theMālatīmādhava,62,139,187ff.,306,308.Mādhavasena, a prince,147.Madhuka, a seer,99.Madhusūdana, redactor of theMahānāṭaka,270,271, n.1,272.Madhyama, in theMadhyamavyāyoga,96.Madness, of Purūravas, as a dramatic motif,150.Magadhavatī, a hetaera,84.Māgha, poet (date, Jacobi, SBAW., 1923, p. 214),284.Magic,111,234.Magic arts, in theRatnāvalī,172,173;in thePriyadarçikā,174;in theNāgānanda,175.Magic gazelle, in the Rāma legend,221.Magic ring, conferring invisibility,101,112.Magicians, tricks of,112,172,173,176,234.Mahādeva, author of theAdbhutadarpaṇa,246,247.Mahādeva, father of Jayadeva,244.Mahākāla, deity of Ujjayinī,186.Mahākavi, ancestor of Bhavabhūti,186.Mahānindaka, a holy man,262.Mahārāja Bhāskaradatta, father of Viçākhadatta,204.Mahārāṇa Meru, of Raypur,270.Māhārāṣṭrī lyric,146.Mahāsena, Pradyota,102,130.Mahāvīra, speech of,87;idol of,254.Mahāvrata rite, relation of, to drama,21,24,26,37,39,45,51,73,112.Mahāyāna school,80;Greek influence on the,58.Mahāyātrika, a comic astrologer,262.Mahendrapāla, of Mahodaya,232.Mahendravikramavarman, an author,93,182–5.Maheçvara, father of Çan̄karalāla,270.Mahiman Bhaṭṭa, writer on poetics,294,322.Mahīpāla, of Mahodaya,232.Māhiṣas, colour of,366.Māhiṣmatī, capital of the Kalacuris,226.Mahomedan influence on decadence of Hindu drama,242,371.Maitreya, a character in theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,259.Maitreya, Cārudatta’sVidūṣaka,139.Makaranda, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193,308,338.Makaranda, friend of Mitrāṇanda,259.Mālatī, in theMālatīmādhava,187ff.,308.Mālava era,144.Mālavikā, heroine of theMālavikāgnimitra,62,63,148,149,158, n.1,159,165,309.Malayaketu, in theMudrārākṣasa,205f.Malayavatī, heroine of theNāgānanda,174,306.Mallikā, heroine of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Mallinātha, commentator on Kālidāsa,145.Mālyavant, minister of Rāvaṇa,189,190,194,227,228,229,233,246.Mammaṭa, writer on poetics,171,295,323,324.Man about town,285.Man of taste,318,368,370.Mandākinī, a magician,257,258.Maṇḍaleçvara Bhaṭṭa, father of Mādhava,268.Mandara, Mount,98.Mandārikā, a friend of aViṭa,264.Mandārikā, a servant,313.Mandasor Praçasti (A.D.473), imitates Kālidāsa,146.Mandodarī, wife of Rāvaṇa,190,246.Maṇicūḍa, legend of,168.Manifestation of affection (narmasphoṭa),327.Maṇika, author of theBhairavānanda,248.Man̄kha, poet,75, n.3,225,259.Manners or styles (vṛttis),12,331,332;in relation to types of dramas,346–51.Manoramā, an attendant in thePriyadarçikā,174,362.Manovatī, acts part of Rambhā,49.Mantharā, a slave woman,189,227,228.Mantragupta, and Kanakalekhā,193, n.2.Manu, censures actors,363.Māra, enemy of the Buddha,180,284.Mārīca, in theÇakuntalā,126,154,158;in the Rāma legend,271.[384]Mārkaṇḍeya, Prākrit grammarian,336.Marriage, celebrated by painting scene of it,102,203.Māruta, hero of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Maruts and Indra, dialogue of,14,19,20.Mārwār, use of Apabhraṅça in,287.Masks, possible use of,365, n.1.Mātali, charioteer of Indra,154,157,160,303,325.Matan̄ga, enemy of Jīmūtavāhana,178.Māthura, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Mathurā, as home of drama,41,70,74.Mathurādāsa, author of theVṛṣabhānujā,257.Mātṛgupta, a poet,291, n.2,232,315, n.1,360.Mātrarāja,seeAnan̄gaharṣa.Matrona, of Greco-Roman drama,65.Mattavilāsa, epithet of Mahendravikramavarman,182.Matters unfit for stage representation,300,301.Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of the Buddha,81,84.Maukhari king, Avantivarman,204.Max Müller, theory of origin of the drama,15.May-day merriment, in England,41.Māyurāja, author ofUdāttarāghava,221,223,297.Māyūrāja, variant of Māyurāja,221, n.1.Megasthenes, refers to the Kordax,42, n.1.Meghanāda, son of Rāvaṇa,190,229,246.Meghaprabhācārya, dramatist,55,269.Mekhalā, a maidservant,235.Melanthos, legend of,37,38.Men, play women’s parts,36,362.Menakā, mother of Çakuntalā,152.Menander, comedy of,60.Menander, king, conquests of,59,60.Mercenary soldiers, reflected in figure ofÇakāra,66.Merchants, or guildsmen, speech of,87,141,336;form of names,313;as heroes of thePrakaraṇa,346;thePrakaraṇikā,348.Meru, Mahārāṇa of Raypur,270.Message, as dramatic device,303.Messenger, of hero,311,312;of heroine,313.Metre, influence of lyrics on,77;of Açvaghoṣa,89,90;Bhāsa,123,124;Mṛcchakaṭikā,142;Kālidāsa,167,168;Harṣa,181;Mahendravikramavarman,185;Bhavabhūti,203;Viçākhadatta,212;BhaṭṭaNārāyaṇa,219;Rājaçekhara,234,236,238;Kṣemīçvara,240;Jayadeva,246;Kṛṣṇamiçra,253;Uddaṇḍin,258;use of, in accord with sentiments,331;in theSamavakāra,346.Mewār, defeat of Jayatala of, by the Mahomedans,249,250.Middle, for active, in Bhāsa,120.Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sanskrit version of,251.Mīlacchrīkāra, a Mahomedan,250.Mildness (mṛdava),329.Miles gloriosus, of Greco-Roman drama,65;Rāvaṇa as a,105.Military spectacle, seeVyāyoga.Mīmāṅsā view of sentiment,316.Mime, Greek, alleged influence of, on Indian drama,67,68.Mimes, in India,49,57.Mimesis, Aristotelian doctrine of,355.Mimetic art,12,296.Mind, movements of, as related to the sentiments,320.Minister, appropriate hero for aPrakaraṇa,306,346;how addressed,314;where placed in the auditorium,370.Mirror of knowledge, an allegorical character,254.Mirth (hāsa), as the basis of the comic sentiment,323.Mise-en-scène,364–9.Mitrāṇanda, hero of theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,258,259.Mitrāvasu, prince of the Siddhas,174,175,178.Miyāṇalladevī, a princess,256.Mlecchas,249,312.Mohanadāsa, commentator on theMahānāṭaka,270.Mōkos, compared withVidūṣaka,67.Mokṣāditya, author of theBhīmavikramavyāyoga,266.Monkey, escape of, as a dramatic motif,175.Monmohan Chakravarti, on date of Kālidāsa,144.Monologue, seeBhāṇa.Moon of Discrimination, an allegorical character,254.Mṛgān̄kalekhā, a hetaera,262.Mṛgān̄kāvalī, a princess,234,235.Mṛgarājalakṣman,212.Mudgala hymn (RV. x.102),18.Muhammad II, of Gujarāt,251.Muktāpīḍa Lalitāditya, of Kashmir, defeats Yaçovarman of Kanyakubja,186.Mūlanāçaka, a barber,261.Munisuvrata, temple of,248.Muñja (A.D.974–95), a king, of Dhārā,292,293.Muralā, a river,191.Murāri, author of theAnargharāghava,225–31,242,244,259,271,352.[385]Mureçvara, a Çaiva ascetic,262,263.Muṣṭika, slain by Kṛṣṇa,100,110.Music,16,25,44,49,50,291,292,339,350,351,352.Mystery of things, in Bhavabhūti,195.
[Contents]MMadana Bālasarasvatī, author of thePārijātamañjarī,256.Madanamālā, a hetaera,134.Madanamañjarī, and a Kāpālika,193, n.2;a hetaera,261.Madanavatī, a female character,260.Madanikā, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Madayantikā, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193.Mādhava, author of theSubhadrāharaṇa,268,342,357.Mādhava, hero of theMālatīmādhava,62,139,187ff.,306,308.Mādhavasena, a prince,147.Madhuka, a seer,99.Madhusūdana, redactor of theMahānāṭaka,270,271, n.1,272.Madhyama, in theMadhyamavyāyoga,96.Madness, of Purūravas, as a dramatic motif,150.Magadhavatī, a hetaera,84.Māgha, poet (date, Jacobi, SBAW., 1923, p. 214),284.Magic,111,234.Magic arts, in theRatnāvalī,172,173;in thePriyadarçikā,174;in theNāgānanda,175.Magic gazelle, in the Rāma legend,221.Magic ring, conferring invisibility,101,112.Magicians, tricks of,112,172,173,176,234.Mahādeva, author of theAdbhutadarpaṇa,246,247.Mahādeva, father of Jayadeva,244.Mahākāla, deity of Ujjayinī,186.Mahākavi, ancestor of Bhavabhūti,186.Mahānindaka, a holy man,262.Mahārāja Bhāskaradatta, father of Viçākhadatta,204.Mahārāṇa Meru, of Raypur,270.Māhārāṣṭrī lyric,146.Mahāsena, Pradyota,102,130.Mahāvīra, speech of,87;idol of,254.Mahāvrata rite, relation of, to drama,21,24,26,37,39,45,51,73,112.Mahāyāna school,80;Greek influence on the,58.Mahāyātrika, a comic astrologer,262.Mahendrapāla, of Mahodaya,232.Mahendravikramavarman, an author,93,182–5.Maheçvara, father of Çan̄karalāla,270.Mahiman Bhaṭṭa, writer on poetics,294,322.Mahīpāla, of Mahodaya,232.Māhiṣas, colour of,366.Māhiṣmatī, capital of the Kalacuris,226.Mahomedan influence on decadence of Hindu drama,242,371.Maitreya, a character in theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,259.Maitreya, Cārudatta’sVidūṣaka,139.Makaranda, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193,308,338.Makaranda, friend of Mitrāṇanda,259.Mālatī, in theMālatīmādhava,187ff.,308.Mālava era,144.Mālavikā, heroine of theMālavikāgnimitra,62,63,148,149,158, n.1,159,165,309.Malayaketu, in theMudrārākṣasa,205f.Malayavatī, heroine of theNāgānanda,174,306.Mallikā, heroine of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Mallinātha, commentator on Kālidāsa,145.Mālyavant, minister of Rāvaṇa,189,190,194,227,228,229,233,246.Mammaṭa, writer on poetics,171,295,323,324.Man about town,285.Man of taste,318,368,370.Mandākinī, a magician,257,258.Maṇḍaleçvara Bhaṭṭa, father of Mādhava,268.Mandara, Mount,98.Mandārikā, a friend of aViṭa,264.Mandārikā, a servant,313.Mandasor Praçasti (A.D.473), imitates Kālidāsa,146.Mandodarī, wife of Rāvaṇa,190,246.Maṇicūḍa, legend of,168.Manifestation of affection (narmasphoṭa),327.Maṇika, author of theBhairavānanda,248.Man̄kha, poet,75, n.3,225,259.Manners or styles (vṛttis),12,331,332;in relation to types of dramas,346–51.Manoramā, an attendant in thePriyadarçikā,174,362.Manovatī, acts part of Rambhā,49.Mantharā, a slave woman,189,227,228.Mantragupta, and Kanakalekhā,193, n.2.Manu, censures actors,363.Māra, enemy of the Buddha,180,284.Mārīca, in theÇakuntalā,126,154,158;in the Rāma legend,271.[384]Mārkaṇḍeya, Prākrit grammarian,336.Marriage, celebrated by painting scene of it,102,203.Māruta, hero of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Maruts and Indra, dialogue of,14,19,20.Mārwār, use of Apabhraṅça in,287.Masks, possible use of,365, n.1.Mātali, charioteer of Indra,154,157,160,303,325.Matan̄ga, enemy of Jīmūtavāhana,178.Māthura, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Mathurā, as home of drama,41,70,74.Mathurādāsa, author of theVṛṣabhānujā,257.Mātṛgupta, a poet,291, n.2,232,315, n.1,360.Mātrarāja,seeAnan̄gaharṣa.Matrona, of Greco-Roman drama,65.Mattavilāsa, epithet of Mahendravikramavarman,182.Matters unfit for stage representation,300,301.Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of the Buddha,81,84.Maukhari king, Avantivarman,204.Max Müller, theory of origin of the drama,15.May-day merriment, in England,41.Māyurāja, author ofUdāttarāghava,221,223,297.Māyūrāja, variant of Māyurāja,221, n.1.Megasthenes, refers to the Kordax,42, n.1.Meghanāda, son of Rāvaṇa,190,229,246.Meghaprabhācārya, dramatist,55,269.Mekhalā, a maidservant,235.Melanthos, legend of,37,38.Men, play women’s parts,36,362.Menakā, mother of Çakuntalā,152.Menander, comedy of,60.Menander, king, conquests of,59,60.Mercenary soldiers, reflected in figure ofÇakāra,66.Merchants, or guildsmen, speech of,87,141,336;form of names,313;as heroes of thePrakaraṇa,346;thePrakaraṇikā,348.Meru, Mahārāṇa of Raypur,270.Message, as dramatic device,303.Messenger, of hero,311,312;of heroine,313.Metre, influence of lyrics on,77;of Açvaghoṣa,89,90;Bhāsa,123,124;Mṛcchakaṭikā,142;Kālidāsa,167,168;Harṣa,181;Mahendravikramavarman,185;Bhavabhūti,203;Viçākhadatta,212;BhaṭṭaNārāyaṇa,219;Rājaçekhara,234,236,238;Kṣemīçvara,240;Jayadeva,246;Kṛṣṇamiçra,253;Uddaṇḍin,258;use of, in accord with sentiments,331;in theSamavakāra,346.Mewār, defeat of Jayatala of, by the Mahomedans,249,250.Middle, for active, in Bhāsa,120.Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sanskrit version of,251.Mīlacchrīkāra, a Mahomedan,250.Mildness (mṛdava),329.Miles gloriosus, of Greco-Roman drama,65;Rāvaṇa as a,105.Military spectacle, seeVyāyoga.Mīmāṅsā view of sentiment,316.Mime, Greek, alleged influence of, on Indian drama,67,68.Mimes, in India,49,57.Mimesis, Aristotelian doctrine of,355.Mimetic art,12,296.Mind, movements of, as related to the sentiments,320.Minister, appropriate hero for aPrakaraṇa,306,346;how addressed,314;where placed in the auditorium,370.Mirror of knowledge, an allegorical character,254.Mirth (hāsa), as the basis of the comic sentiment,323.Mise-en-scène,364–9.Mitrāṇanda, hero of theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,258,259.Mitrāvasu, prince of the Siddhas,174,175,178.Miyāṇalladevī, a princess,256.Mlecchas,249,312.Mohanadāsa, commentator on theMahānāṭaka,270.Mōkos, compared withVidūṣaka,67.Mokṣāditya, author of theBhīmavikramavyāyoga,266.Monkey, escape of, as a dramatic motif,175.Monmohan Chakravarti, on date of Kālidāsa,144.Monologue, seeBhāṇa.Moon of Discrimination, an allegorical character,254.Mṛgān̄kalekhā, a hetaera,262.Mṛgān̄kāvalī, a princess,234,235.Mṛgarājalakṣman,212.Mudgala hymn (RV. x.102),18.Muhammad II, of Gujarāt,251.Muktāpīḍa Lalitāditya, of Kashmir, defeats Yaçovarman of Kanyakubja,186.Mūlanāçaka, a barber,261.Munisuvrata, temple of,248.Muñja (A.D.974–95), a king, of Dhārā,292,293.Muralā, a river,191.Murāri, author of theAnargharāghava,225–31,242,244,259,271,352.[385]Mureçvara, a Çaiva ascetic,262,263.Muṣṭika, slain by Kṛṣṇa,100,110.Music,16,25,44,49,50,291,292,339,350,351,352.Mystery of things, in Bhavabhūti,195.
[Contents]MMadana Bālasarasvatī, author of thePārijātamañjarī,256.Madanamālā, a hetaera,134.Madanamañjarī, and a Kāpālika,193, n.2;a hetaera,261.Madanavatī, a female character,260.Madanikā, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Madayantikā, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193.Mādhava, author of theSubhadrāharaṇa,268,342,357.Mādhava, hero of theMālatīmādhava,62,139,187ff.,306,308.Mādhavasena, a prince,147.Madhuka, a seer,99.Madhusūdana, redactor of theMahānāṭaka,270,271, n.1,272.Madhyama, in theMadhyamavyāyoga,96.Madness, of Purūravas, as a dramatic motif,150.Magadhavatī, a hetaera,84.Māgha, poet (date, Jacobi, SBAW., 1923, p. 214),284.Magic,111,234.Magic arts, in theRatnāvalī,172,173;in thePriyadarçikā,174;in theNāgānanda,175.Magic gazelle, in the Rāma legend,221.Magic ring, conferring invisibility,101,112.Magicians, tricks of,112,172,173,176,234.Mahādeva, author of theAdbhutadarpaṇa,246,247.Mahādeva, father of Jayadeva,244.Mahākāla, deity of Ujjayinī,186.Mahākavi, ancestor of Bhavabhūti,186.Mahānindaka, a holy man,262.Mahārāja Bhāskaradatta, father of Viçākhadatta,204.Mahārāṇa Meru, of Raypur,270.Māhārāṣṭrī lyric,146.Mahāsena, Pradyota,102,130.Mahāvīra, speech of,87;idol of,254.Mahāvrata rite, relation of, to drama,21,24,26,37,39,45,51,73,112.Mahāyāna school,80;Greek influence on the,58.Mahāyātrika, a comic astrologer,262.Mahendrapāla, of Mahodaya,232.Mahendravikramavarman, an author,93,182–5.Maheçvara, father of Çan̄karalāla,270.Mahiman Bhaṭṭa, writer on poetics,294,322.Mahīpāla, of Mahodaya,232.Māhiṣas, colour of,366.Māhiṣmatī, capital of the Kalacuris,226.Mahomedan influence on decadence of Hindu drama,242,371.Maitreya, a character in theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,259.Maitreya, Cārudatta’sVidūṣaka,139.Makaranda, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193,308,338.Makaranda, friend of Mitrāṇanda,259.Mālatī, in theMālatīmādhava,187ff.,308.Mālava era,144.Mālavikā, heroine of theMālavikāgnimitra,62,63,148,149,158, n.1,159,165,309.Malayaketu, in theMudrārākṣasa,205f.Malayavatī, heroine of theNāgānanda,174,306.Mallikā, heroine of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Mallinātha, commentator on Kālidāsa,145.Mālyavant, minister of Rāvaṇa,189,190,194,227,228,229,233,246.Mammaṭa, writer on poetics,171,295,323,324.Man about town,285.Man of taste,318,368,370.Mandākinī, a magician,257,258.Maṇḍaleçvara Bhaṭṭa, father of Mādhava,268.Mandara, Mount,98.Mandārikā, a friend of aViṭa,264.Mandārikā, a servant,313.Mandasor Praçasti (A.D.473), imitates Kālidāsa,146.Mandodarī, wife of Rāvaṇa,190,246.Maṇicūḍa, legend of,168.Manifestation of affection (narmasphoṭa),327.Maṇika, author of theBhairavānanda,248.Man̄kha, poet,75, n.3,225,259.Manners or styles (vṛttis),12,331,332;in relation to types of dramas,346–51.Manoramā, an attendant in thePriyadarçikā,174,362.Manovatī, acts part of Rambhā,49.Mantharā, a slave woman,189,227,228.Mantragupta, and Kanakalekhā,193, n.2.Manu, censures actors,363.Māra, enemy of the Buddha,180,284.Mārīca, in theÇakuntalā,126,154,158;in the Rāma legend,271.[384]Mārkaṇḍeya, Prākrit grammarian,336.Marriage, celebrated by painting scene of it,102,203.Māruta, hero of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Maruts and Indra, dialogue of,14,19,20.Mārwār, use of Apabhraṅça in,287.Masks, possible use of,365, n.1.Mātali, charioteer of Indra,154,157,160,303,325.Matan̄ga, enemy of Jīmūtavāhana,178.Māthura, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Mathurā, as home of drama,41,70,74.Mathurādāsa, author of theVṛṣabhānujā,257.Mātṛgupta, a poet,291, n.2,232,315, n.1,360.Mātrarāja,seeAnan̄gaharṣa.Matrona, of Greco-Roman drama,65.Mattavilāsa, epithet of Mahendravikramavarman,182.Matters unfit for stage representation,300,301.Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of the Buddha,81,84.Maukhari king, Avantivarman,204.Max Müller, theory of origin of the drama,15.May-day merriment, in England,41.Māyurāja, author ofUdāttarāghava,221,223,297.Māyūrāja, variant of Māyurāja,221, n.1.Megasthenes, refers to the Kordax,42, n.1.Meghanāda, son of Rāvaṇa,190,229,246.Meghaprabhācārya, dramatist,55,269.Mekhalā, a maidservant,235.Melanthos, legend of,37,38.Men, play women’s parts,36,362.Menakā, mother of Çakuntalā,152.Menander, comedy of,60.Menander, king, conquests of,59,60.Mercenary soldiers, reflected in figure ofÇakāra,66.Merchants, or guildsmen, speech of,87,141,336;form of names,313;as heroes of thePrakaraṇa,346;thePrakaraṇikā,348.Meru, Mahārāṇa of Raypur,270.Message, as dramatic device,303.Messenger, of hero,311,312;of heroine,313.Metre, influence of lyrics on,77;of Açvaghoṣa,89,90;Bhāsa,123,124;Mṛcchakaṭikā,142;Kālidāsa,167,168;Harṣa,181;Mahendravikramavarman,185;Bhavabhūti,203;Viçākhadatta,212;BhaṭṭaNārāyaṇa,219;Rājaçekhara,234,236,238;Kṣemīçvara,240;Jayadeva,246;Kṛṣṇamiçra,253;Uddaṇḍin,258;use of, in accord with sentiments,331;in theSamavakāra,346.Mewār, defeat of Jayatala of, by the Mahomedans,249,250.Middle, for active, in Bhāsa,120.Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sanskrit version of,251.Mīlacchrīkāra, a Mahomedan,250.Mildness (mṛdava),329.Miles gloriosus, of Greco-Roman drama,65;Rāvaṇa as a,105.Military spectacle, seeVyāyoga.Mīmāṅsā view of sentiment,316.Mime, Greek, alleged influence of, on Indian drama,67,68.Mimes, in India,49,57.Mimesis, Aristotelian doctrine of,355.Mimetic art,12,296.Mind, movements of, as related to the sentiments,320.Minister, appropriate hero for aPrakaraṇa,306,346;how addressed,314;where placed in the auditorium,370.Mirror of knowledge, an allegorical character,254.Mirth (hāsa), as the basis of the comic sentiment,323.Mise-en-scène,364–9.Mitrāṇanda, hero of theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,258,259.Mitrāvasu, prince of the Siddhas,174,175,178.Miyāṇalladevī, a princess,256.Mlecchas,249,312.Mohanadāsa, commentator on theMahānāṭaka,270.Mōkos, compared withVidūṣaka,67.Mokṣāditya, author of theBhīmavikramavyāyoga,266.Monkey, escape of, as a dramatic motif,175.Monmohan Chakravarti, on date of Kālidāsa,144.Monologue, seeBhāṇa.Moon of Discrimination, an allegorical character,254.Mṛgān̄kalekhā, a hetaera,262.Mṛgān̄kāvalī, a princess,234,235.Mṛgarājalakṣman,212.Mudgala hymn (RV. x.102),18.Muhammad II, of Gujarāt,251.Muktāpīḍa Lalitāditya, of Kashmir, defeats Yaçovarman of Kanyakubja,186.Mūlanāçaka, a barber,261.Munisuvrata, temple of,248.Muñja (A.D.974–95), a king, of Dhārā,292,293.Muralā, a river,191.Murāri, author of theAnargharāghava,225–31,242,244,259,271,352.[385]Mureçvara, a Çaiva ascetic,262,263.Muṣṭika, slain by Kṛṣṇa,100,110.Music,16,25,44,49,50,291,292,339,350,351,352.Mystery of things, in Bhavabhūti,195.
M
Madana Bālasarasvatī, author of thePārijātamañjarī,256.Madanamālā, a hetaera,134.Madanamañjarī, and a Kāpālika,193, n.2;a hetaera,261.Madanavatī, a female character,260.Madanikā, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Madayantikā, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193.Mādhava, author of theSubhadrāharaṇa,268,342,357.Mādhava, hero of theMālatīmādhava,62,139,187ff.,306,308.Mādhavasena, a prince,147.Madhuka, a seer,99.Madhusūdana, redactor of theMahānāṭaka,270,271, n.1,272.Madhyama, in theMadhyamavyāyoga,96.Madness, of Purūravas, as a dramatic motif,150.Magadhavatī, a hetaera,84.Māgha, poet (date, Jacobi, SBAW., 1923, p. 214),284.Magic,111,234.Magic arts, in theRatnāvalī,172,173;in thePriyadarçikā,174;in theNāgānanda,175.Magic gazelle, in the Rāma legend,221.Magic ring, conferring invisibility,101,112.Magicians, tricks of,112,172,173,176,234.Mahādeva, author of theAdbhutadarpaṇa,246,247.Mahādeva, father of Jayadeva,244.Mahākāla, deity of Ujjayinī,186.Mahākavi, ancestor of Bhavabhūti,186.Mahānindaka, a holy man,262.Mahārāja Bhāskaradatta, father of Viçākhadatta,204.Mahārāṇa Meru, of Raypur,270.Māhārāṣṭrī lyric,146.Mahāsena, Pradyota,102,130.Mahāvīra, speech of,87;idol of,254.Mahāvrata rite, relation of, to drama,21,24,26,37,39,45,51,73,112.Mahāyāna school,80;Greek influence on the,58.Mahāyātrika, a comic astrologer,262.Mahendrapāla, of Mahodaya,232.Mahendravikramavarman, an author,93,182–5.Maheçvara, father of Çan̄karalāla,270.Mahiman Bhaṭṭa, writer on poetics,294,322.Mahīpāla, of Mahodaya,232.Māhiṣas, colour of,366.Māhiṣmatī, capital of the Kalacuris,226.Mahomedan influence on decadence of Hindu drama,242,371.Maitreya, a character in theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,259.Maitreya, Cārudatta’sVidūṣaka,139.Makaranda, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193,308,338.Makaranda, friend of Mitrāṇanda,259.Mālatī, in theMālatīmādhava,187ff.,308.Mālava era,144.Mālavikā, heroine of theMālavikāgnimitra,62,63,148,149,158, n.1,159,165,309.Malayaketu, in theMudrārākṣasa,205f.Malayavatī, heroine of theNāgānanda,174,306.Mallikā, heroine of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Mallinātha, commentator on Kālidāsa,145.Mālyavant, minister of Rāvaṇa,189,190,194,227,228,229,233,246.Mammaṭa, writer on poetics,171,295,323,324.Man about town,285.Man of taste,318,368,370.Mandākinī, a magician,257,258.Maṇḍaleçvara Bhaṭṭa, father of Mādhava,268.Mandara, Mount,98.Mandārikā, a friend of aViṭa,264.Mandārikā, a servant,313.Mandasor Praçasti (A.D.473), imitates Kālidāsa,146.Mandodarī, wife of Rāvaṇa,190,246.Maṇicūḍa, legend of,168.Manifestation of affection (narmasphoṭa),327.Maṇika, author of theBhairavānanda,248.Man̄kha, poet,75, n.3,225,259.Manners or styles (vṛttis),12,331,332;in relation to types of dramas,346–51.Manoramā, an attendant in thePriyadarçikā,174,362.Manovatī, acts part of Rambhā,49.Mantharā, a slave woman,189,227,228.Mantragupta, and Kanakalekhā,193, n.2.Manu, censures actors,363.Māra, enemy of the Buddha,180,284.Mārīca, in theÇakuntalā,126,154,158;in the Rāma legend,271.[384]Mārkaṇḍeya, Prākrit grammarian,336.Marriage, celebrated by painting scene of it,102,203.Māruta, hero of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.Maruts and Indra, dialogue of,14,19,20.Mārwār, use of Apabhraṅça in,287.Masks, possible use of,365, n.1.Mātali, charioteer of Indra,154,157,160,303,325.Matan̄ga, enemy of Jīmūtavāhana,178.Māthura, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.Mathurā, as home of drama,41,70,74.Mathurādāsa, author of theVṛṣabhānujā,257.Mātṛgupta, a poet,291, n.2,232,315, n.1,360.Mātrarāja,seeAnan̄gaharṣa.Matrona, of Greco-Roman drama,65.Mattavilāsa, epithet of Mahendravikramavarman,182.Matters unfit for stage representation,300,301.Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of the Buddha,81,84.Maukhari king, Avantivarman,204.Max Müller, theory of origin of the drama,15.May-day merriment, in England,41.Māyurāja, author ofUdāttarāghava,221,223,297.Māyūrāja, variant of Māyurāja,221, n.1.Megasthenes, refers to the Kordax,42, n.1.Meghanāda, son of Rāvaṇa,190,229,246.Meghaprabhācārya, dramatist,55,269.Mekhalā, a maidservant,235.Melanthos, legend of,37,38.Men, play women’s parts,36,362.Menakā, mother of Çakuntalā,152.Menander, comedy of,60.Menander, king, conquests of,59,60.Mercenary soldiers, reflected in figure ofÇakāra,66.Merchants, or guildsmen, speech of,87,141,336;form of names,313;as heroes of thePrakaraṇa,346;thePrakaraṇikā,348.Meru, Mahārāṇa of Raypur,270.Message, as dramatic device,303.Messenger, of hero,311,312;of heroine,313.Metre, influence of lyrics on,77;of Açvaghoṣa,89,90;Bhāsa,123,124;Mṛcchakaṭikā,142;Kālidāsa,167,168;Harṣa,181;Mahendravikramavarman,185;Bhavabhūti,203;Viçākhadatta,212;BhaṭṭaNārāyaṇa,219;Rājaçekhara,234,236,238;Kṣemīçvara,240;Jayadeva,246;Kṛṣṇamiçra,253;Uddaṇḍin,258;use of, in accord with sentiments,331;in theSamavakāra,346.Mewār, defeat of Jayatala of, by the Mahomedans,249,250.Middle, for active, in Bhāsa,120.Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sanskrit version of,251.Mīlacchrīkāra, a Mahomedan,250.Mildness (mṛdava),329.Miles gloriosus, of Greco-Roman drama,65;Rāvaṇa as a,105.Military spectacle, seeVyāyoga.Mīmāṅsā view of sentiment,316.Mime, Greek, alleged influence of, on Indian drama,67,68.Mimes, in India,49,57.Mimesis, Aristotelian doctrine of,355.Mimetic art,12,296.Mind, movements of, as related to the sentiments,320.Minister, appropriate hero for aPrakaraṇa,306,346;how addressed,314;where placed in the auditorium,370.Mirror of knowledge, an allegorical character,254.Mirth (hāsa), as the basis of the comic sentiment,323.Mise-en-scène,364–9.Mitrāṇanda, hero of theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,258,259.Mitrāvasu, prince of the Siddhas,174,175,178.Miyāṇalladevī, a princess,256.Mlecchas,249,312.Mohanadāsa, commentator on theMahānāṭaka,270.Mōkos, compared withVidūṣaka,67.Mokṣāditya, author of theBhīmavikramavyāyoga,266.Monkey, escape of, as a dramatic motif,175.Monmohan Chakravarti, on date of Kālidāsa,144.Monologue, seeBhāṇa.Moon of Discrimination, an allegorical character,254.Mṛgān̄kalekhā, a hetaera,262.Mṛgān̄kāvalī, a princess,234,235.Mṛgarājalakṣman,212.Mudgala hymn (RV. x.102),18.Muhammad II, of Gujarāt,251.Muktāpīḍa Lalitāditya, of Kashmir, defeats Yaçovarman of Kanyakubja,186.Mūlanāçaka, a barber,261.Munisuvrata, temple of,248.Muñja (A.D.974–95), a king, of Dhārā,292,293.Muralā, a river,191.Murāri, author of theAnargharāghava,225–31,242,244,259,271,352.[385]Mureçvara, a Çaiva ascetic,262,263.Muṣṭika, slain by Kṛṣṇa,100,110.Music,16,25,44,49,50,291,292,339,350,351,352.Mystery of things, in Bhavabhūti,195.
Madana Bālasarasvatī, author of thePārijātamañjarī,256.
Madanamālā, a hetaera,134.
Madanamañjarī, and a Kāpālika,193, n.2;a hetaera,261.
Madanavatī, a female character,260.
Madanikā, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.
Madayantikā, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193.
Mādhava, author of theSubhadrāharaṇa,268,342,357.
Mādhava, hero of theMālatīmādhava,62,139,187ff.,306,308.
Mādhavasena, a prince,147.
Madhuka, a seer,99.
Madhusūdana, redactor of theMahānāṭaka,270,271, n.1,272.
Madhyama, in theMadhyamavyāyoga,96.
Madness, of Purūravas, as a dramatic motif,150.
Magadhavatī, a hetaera,84.
Māgha, poet (date, Jacobi, SBAW., 1923, p. 214),284.
Magic,111,234.
Magic arts, in theRatnāvalī,172,173;in thePriyadarçikā,174;in theNāgānanda,175.
Magic gazelle, in the Rāma legend,221.
Magic ring, conferring invisibility,101,112.
Magicians, tricks of,112,172,173,176,234.
Mahādeva, author of theAdbhutadarpaṇa,246,247.
Mahādeva, father of Jayadeva,244.
Mahākāla, deity of Ujjayinī,186.
Mahākavi, ancestor of Bhavabhūti,186.
Mahānindaka, a holy man,262.
Mahārāja Bhāskaradatta, father of Viçākhadatta,204.
Mahārāṇa Meru, of Raypur,270.
Māhārāṣṭrī lyric,146.
Mahāsena, Pradyota,102,130.
Mahāvīra, speech of,87;idol of,254.
Mahāvrata rite, relation of, to drama,21,24,26,37,39,45,51,73,112.
Mahāyāna school,80;Greek influence on the,58.
Mahāyātrika, a comic astrologer,262.
Mahendrapāla, of Mahodaya,232.
Mahendravikramavarman, an author,93,182–5.
Maheçvara, father of Çan̄karalāla,270.
Mahiman Bhaṭṭa, writer on poetics,294,322.
Mahīpāla, of Mahodaya,232.
Māhiṣas, colour of,366.
Māhiṣmatī, capital of the Kalacuris,226.
Mahomedan influence on decadence of Hindu drama,242,371.
Maitreya, a character in theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,259.
Maitreya, Cārudatta’sVidūṣaka,139.
Makaranda, in theMālatīmādhava,188,193,308,338.
Makaranda, friend of Mitrāṇanda,259.
Mālatī, in theMālatīmādhava,187ff.,308.
Mālava era,144.
Mālavikā, heroine of theMālavikāgnimitra,62,63,148,149,158, n.1,159,165,309.
Malayaketu, in theMudrārākṣasa,205f.
Malayavatī, heroine of theNāgānanda,174,306.
Mallikā, heroine of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.
Mallinātha, commentator on Kālidāsa,145.
Mālyavant, minister of Rāvaṇa,189,190,194,227,228,229,233,246.
Mammaṭa, writer on poetics,171,295,323,324.
Man about town,285.
Man of taste,318,368,370.
Mandākinī, a magician,257,258.
Maṇḍaleçvara Bhaṭṭa, father of Mādhava,268.
Mandara, Mount,98.
Mandārikā, a friend of aViṭa,264.
Mandārikā, a servant,313.
Mandasor Praçasti (A.D.473), imitates Kālidāsa,146.
Mandodarī, wife of Rāvaṇa,190,246.
Maṇicūḍa, legend of,168.
Manifestation of affection (narmasphoṭa),327.
Maṇika, author of theBhairavānanda,248.
Man̄kha, poet,75, n.3,225,259.
Manners or styles (vṛttis),12,331,332;in relation to types of dramas,346–51.
Manoramā, an attendant in thePriyadarçikā,174,362.
Manovatī, acts part of Rambhā,49.
Mantharā, a slave woman,189,227,228.
Mantragupta, and Kanakalekhā,193, n.2.
Manu, censures actors,363.
Māra, enemy of the Buddha,180,284.
Mārīca, in theÇakuntalā,126,154,158;in the Rāma legend,271.[384]
Mārkaṇḍeya, Prākrit grammarian,336.
Marriage, celebrated by painting scene of it,102,203.
Māruta, hero of theMallikāmāruta,257,258.
Maruts and Indra, dialogue of,14,19,20.
Mārwār, use of Apabhraṅça in,287.
Masks, possible use of,365, n.1.
Mātali, charioteer of Indra,154,157,160,303,325.
Matan̄ga, enemy of Jīmūtavāhana,178.
Māthura, in theMṛcchakaṭikā,135.
Mathurā, as home of drama,41,70,74.
Mathurādāsa, author of theVṛṣabhānujā,257.
Mātṛgupta, a poet,291, n.2,232,315, n.1,360.
Mātrarāja,seeAnan̄gaharṣa.
Matrona, of Greco-Roman drama,65.
Mattavilāsa, epithet of Mahendravikramavarman,182.
Matters unfit for stage representation,300,301.
Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of the Buddha,81,84.
Maukhari king, Avantivarman,204.
Max Müller, theory of origin of the drama,15.
May-day merriment, in England,41.
Māyurāja, author ofUdāttarāghava,221,223,297.
Māyūrāja, variant of Māyurāja,221, n.1.
Megasthenes, refers to the Kordax,42, n.1.
Meghanāda, son of Rāvaṇa,190,229,246.
Meghaprabhācārya, dramatist,55,269.
Mekhalā, a maidservant,235.
Melanthos, legend of,37,38.
Men, play women’s parts,36,362.
Menakā, mother of Çakuntalā,152.
Menander, comedy of,60.
Menander, king, conquests of,59,60.
Mercenary soldiers, reflected in figure ofÇakāra,66.
Merchants, or guildsmen, speech of,87,141,336;form of names,313;as heroes of thePrakaraṇa,346;thePrakaraṇikā,348.
Meru, Mahārāṇa of Raypur,270.
Message, as dramatic device,303.
Messenger, of hero,311,312;of heroine,313.
Metre, influence of lyrics on,77;of Açvaghoṣa,89,90;Bhāsa,123,124;Mṛcchakaṭikā,142;Kālidāsa,167,168;Harṣa,181;Mahendravikramavarman,185;Bhavabhūti,203;Viçākhadatta,212;BhaṭṭaNārāyaṇa,219;Rājaçekhara,234,236,238;Kṣemīçvara,240;Jayadeva,246;Kṛṣṇamiçra,253;Uddaṇḍin,258;use of, in accord with sentiments,331;in theSamavakāra,346.
Mewār, defeat of Jayatala of, by the Mahomedans,249,250.
Middle, for active, in Bhāsa,120.
Midsummer Night’s Dream, Sanskrit version of,251.
Mīlacchrīkāra, a Mahomedan,250.
Mildness (mṛdava),329.
Miles gloriosus, of Greco-Roman drama,65;Rāvaṇa as a,105.
Military spectacle, seeVyāyoga.
Mīmāṅsā view of sentiment,316.
Mime, Greek, alleged influence of, on Indian drama,67,68.
Mimes, in India,49,57.
Mimesis, Aristotelian doctrine of,355.
Mimetic art,12,296.
Mind, movements of, as related to the sentiments,320.
Minister, appropriate hero for aPrakaraṇa,306,346;how addressed,314;where placed in the auditorium,370.
Mirror of knowledge, an allegorical character,254.
Mirth (hāsa), as the basis of the comic sentiment,323.
Mise-en-scène,364–9.
Mitrāṇanda, hero of theKaumudīmitrāṇanda,258,259.
Mitrāvasu, prince of the Siddhas,174,175,178.
Miyāṇalladevī, a princess,256.
Mlecchas,249,312.
Mohanadāsa, commentator on theMahānāṭaka,270.
Mōkos, compared withVidūṣaka,67.
Mokṣāditya, author of theBhīmavikramavyāyoga,266.
Monkey, escape of, as a dramatic motif,175.
Monmohan Chakravarti, on date of Kālidāsa,144.
Monologue, seeBhāṇa.
Moon of Discrimination, an allegorical character,254.
Mṛgān̄kalekhā, a hetaera,262.
Mṛgān̄kāvalī, a princess,234,235.
Mṛgarājalakṣman,212.
Mudgala hymn (RV. x.102),18.
Muhammad II, of Gujarāt,251.
Muktāpīḍa Lalitāditya, of Kashmir, defeats Yaçovarman of Kanyakubja,186.
Mūlanāçaka, a barber,261.
Munisuvrata, temple of,248.
Muñja (A.D.974–95), a king, of Dhārā,292,293.
Muralā, a river,191.
Murāri, author of theAnargharāghava,225–31,242,244,259,271,352.[385]
Mureçvara, a Çaiva ascetic,262,263.
Muṣṭika, slain by Kṛṣṇa,100,110.
Music,16,25,44,49,50,291,292,339,350,351,352.
Mystery of things, in Bhavabhūti,195.