Dear McComas,

     What a beautiful quote.  Somewhat similar to my first encounter with American English.  After studying in English for years in Pune, I traveled to New York on a ship in August 1968, and when my ship docked in the harbor, the dock workers helped me get my ocean trunks down to the shore.  To my absolute shock, I could not understand a word of what they said to me and they could not quite follow my Puneri English.  My pride in being able to communicate in English in Pune was completely shattered, and only the intervention by a Marathi acquaintance who had come to receive me saved the day.  Best wishes,

Madhav

Madhav M. Deshpande
Professor Emeritus, Sanskrit and Linguistics
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Senior Fellow, Oxford Center for Hindu Studies

[Residence: Campbell, California, USA]


On Sun, Jun 14, 2020 at 11:56 PM McComas Taylor via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:
One of my students, Alex Watt, found this interesting passage in MMW's 'Modern India and the Indians' (1878), p.38

"... a deputation of Brāhmans is seen approaching. They have come to greet me on my arrival; some of them are Pandits. A mat is spread for them in a vacant tent. They enter without shoes, make respectful salaams and squat around me in a semi-circle. I thoughtlessly shake hands with the chief Pandit, a dignified venerable old gentleman, forgetful that the touch of a Mleccha (English barbarian) will entail upon him laborious purificatory ceremonies on his return to his own house. We then exchange compliments in Sanskṛit and I ask them many questions, and propound difficulties for discussion. Their fluency in talking Sanskṛit surprises me, and certainly surpasses mine. We English scholars treat Sanskṛit as a dead language, but here in India I am expected to speak it as if it were my mother-tongue. Once or twice I find myself floundering disastrously, but the polite Pandits help me out of my difficulties..."





McComas Taylor
Associate Professor
Reader in Sanskrit
College of Asia and the Pacific
The Australian National University
WSC Website| McC Website

Tel: +61 2 6125 3179
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