Many thanks, George! I have got the 'Einleitung' that I badly needed. Renou has indeed made some vital changes even in the main body, I am now confirmed. I can now also mark how far the end notes have been updated.
I repeat - I have got the part I needed.  So many distant friends!
You need not scan, tho I heartily thank you for the kind offer. I have been using the AiG a,b,c,d as Hauschild has called them, for long.
I shall be glad to render any help that I offer from here.
Best wishes and thanks
DB



On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 11:23 PM, George Thompson <gthomgt@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Dipak,

I'm not sure that I understand.  Do you still need Wackernagel's original Einleitung, or do you have it already?

I don't have a pdf of it, but I have the original edition and could scan it for you if necessary.

Best wishes,

George


On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 12:10 PM, Dipak Bhattacharya <dipak.d2004@gmail.com> wrote:

<indology@list.indology.info>, <lubint@wlu.edu>, <daniel@danielstender.com>, <pwyzlic@uni-bonn.de>, <ashok.aklujkar@gmail.com>

2.7.14

Dear Colleagues,

I sincerely thank my kind colleagues, Professors Tim Lubin, Daniel Stender, Peter Wyzlik and Asok Aklujkar for the prompt reply sent by them along with attachments that I downloaded and saved. There was some misunderstanding that, however, has done no harm. The matter stands as follows

I do have Renou's Introduction générale - a relatively new and usable copy of my own. What I lacked was the German Einleitung of 1896. Our University Library does have it but it is so brittle that it is not lent for use and cannot be Xeroxed. It was reserved for digitalization. Digitalization is on but not yet complete. I enquired a few times. It had not been digitalized till my last enquiry. I searched the few online archives/libraries but could not trace the volume.

That forced me to request for help for the German Einleitung. I am deeply indebted to the Indology site and the helping colleagues. And this is not the first time I have been helped in urgent need.

Some unwanted rantings.

Everybody knows that even after Burrow Wackernagel/Renou's Introduction générale stands a colossus among introductory essays on the language of Sanskrit. But it offers a few problems particularly to teachers who try to help students with it. One does not easily know which part is Renou's and which part is Wackernagel's. Again unlike German, French may sometimes lend itself to more than one interpretation. These make it imperative that one should have both Renou and the original.

Best wishes everybody

Sincerely

Dipak Bhattacharya

 

 


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