in regard
to our Clerk. Under the Mahomedan sovereigns of India, _Bakhshi_ was
applied to an officer performing something like the duties of a
quartermaster-general; and finally, in our Indian army, it has come to
mean a paymaster. In the latter sense, I imagine it has got associated in
the popular mind with the Persian _bakhshidan_, to bestow, and
_bakhshish_. (See a note in _Q. R._ p. 184 seqq.; _Cathay_, p. 474; _Ayeen
Akbery_, III. 150; _Pallas, Samml._ II. 126; _Levchine_, p. 355; _Klap.
Mem._ III.; _Vambery, Sketches_, p. 81.)
The sketch from the life, on p. 326, of a wandering Tibetan devotee, whom
I met once at Hardwar, may give an idea of the sordid _Bacsis_ spoken of
by Polo.
NOTE 11.--This feat is related more briefly by Odoric: "And jugglers cause
cups of gold full of good wine to fly through the air, and to offer
themselves to all who list to drink." (_Cathay_, p. 143.) In the note on
that passage I have referred to a somewhat similar story in the _Life of
Apollonius_. "Such feats," says Mr. Jaeschke, "are often mentioned in
ancient as well as modern legends of Buddha and other saints; and our
Lamas have heard of things very similar performed by conjuring _Bonpos_."
(See p. 323.) The moving of cups and the like is one of the sorceries
ascribed in old legends to Simon Magus: "He made statues to walk; leapt
into the fire without being burnt; flew in the air; made bread of stones;
changed his shape; assumed two faces at once; converted himself into a
pillar; caused closed doors to fly open spontaneously; made the vessels in
a house seem to move of themselves," etc. The Jesuit Delrio laments that
credulous princes, otherwise of pious repute, should have allowed diabolic
tricks to be played before them, "as, for example, things of iron, and
silver goblets, or other heavy articles, to be moved by bounds from one
end of a table to the other, without the use of a magnet or of any
attachment." The pious prince appears to have been Charles IX., and the
conjuror a certain Cesare Maltesio. Another Jesuit author describes the
veritable mango-trick, speaking of persons who "within three hours' space
did cause a genuine shrub of a span in length to grow out of the table,
besides other trees that produced both leaves and fruit."
In a letter dated 1st December, 1875, written by Mr. R. B. Shaw, after his
last return from Kashgar and Lahore, this distinguished traveller says; "I
have heard stories related regarding a Bu
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