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INTRODUCTION
The style on the whole is simplo, chusto and fluent, though, in descriptions and verses we get sometimes lengthy compounds and Desi words. Many it time we come across very small sentences.
.. (82) Sambohapayarana or Tattapayāsaga
This is practicallya Päiya work in verse. It is divideil into 12 sections (alhikaras). They consist of 3:35, 171, 352, 102, 41, 115, 153, 9, 30, 109, 51 and 140 verses respectively. Their respective topics are: nature of God, characteristics of pseudopreceptors, nature of a real preceptor, light faith, the Jaindo House-holders, postures (pratimus) of the Jaina laity, their vows, instincts, lesyās, meditation, wrong belief and alocani. In section III, v. 91-92 practically agree with the first two güthis of Pancindiyasuutta. IV, 28 occurs is a quotation in Haribhadra's com. (p. Ia) on Pañoasuttaga (II). Ratnasekhara Suri, pupil of Jayasekhara Suri has composed Sambohasattari by extracting gjāthas as stated by himself in the opening verse. At least some of these gathās are from this Sambohapayaranc which has been published by Jaina-grantha-prakāśaka-sabha, Ahmedabad, in 1916 A,D. In this edition on p. 59b wo have: ..."इति श्रीसंबोधप्रकरणं तत्वप्रकाशकनाम श्वेताम्बराचार्यश्रीहरिभद्रसूरिभिर्याकिनी महत्तराशिष्यणीमनोहरीयाप्रबोधनार्थमिति श्रेयः।" । . .. From this it follows that this work is also named as Tattvaprakāšaka in Sanskřta, and that it was composed by Haribhadra with a view to enlightening Manoharīyā, female pupil of Mahattarai Yakini.
The colophon is followed by several yentras (diagrams). (84 & 85 ) Sarvajñasiddhit and its svopajña com.
The text is referred to in AJP (Vol. II, p. 49), and its svopajña com. in the svopajña com. (Vol. I, pp. 6 and 116) on AJP. The text is a Sanskrta prakaranat. It opens with the following verse whereby the author salutes a Tirthařkara:
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2 3 4
These words occurring in Bhavas I, II and VI are noted £9 D in the Glossary by M. O. Modi in his edition of this work, In section XI v. 5-12 are in Sanskrta
: Their vices have been ridiculed as expected of a true satirist. This has been published in 14 pages along with Himsūstaka, its svopajña evacūri and Aindrastuti by §. X. Samstha, Rutlam, in 19:24 A. D. . . . . .