Dear friends,

In the opening verses (given below) of the Abhisamayālamkāra-śāstra (ASA), an 
important Mahāyāna Buddhist treatise (said to have been revealed to Asaṅga by 
the bodhisattva Maitreya), we find two instances of verbs that I take to be 
examples of “precatives” or “benedictives” (āśīrliṅ) in the middle voice 
(ātmanepāda) third person plural. Whitney (925) and Macdonell (150) both flatly 
state that the precative middle, though current in Vedic, does not occur in 
Classical Sanskrit. Renou (330-331) does not affirm this categorically, but 
suggests that the āśīrliṅ (without specifying voice) is commonly met with in 
kāvya and epigraphy, though unknown to Buddhist usage. Edgerton, BHS Grammar, 
has nothing at all to say about the āśīrliṅ, probably due to its absence in the 
corpus that he consulted, though the ASA is not in any case written in “hybrid” 
Sanskrit; its terminology is distinctly Buddhist, of course, but without 
peculiarly BHS grammatical forms.

Conze, in the vocabulary accompanying his summary translation of the ASA (SOR 
VI) offers no grammatical analysis, but treats vīkṣiṣīran as an aorist 
optative, “have been able to behold,” and pratipatsīran as a future optative, 
“will be able to make progress.” (It seems simpler to me to adopt a mildly 
benedictive reading of both, “that the wise may behold… and that they may 
easily master…”)

What I wish to ask the vyākaraṇa specialists, however, is whether I am correct 
to take these verbs as middle voice āśīrliṅ third person plural? And, if so, 
are there other instances, whether in Buddhist or non-Buddhist works, that 
similarly call into question Whitney and Macdonell’s assertions? I would 
welcome any other observations about this apparently unusual form that you may 
be able to share. In particular, I am wondering if it is plausible to take its 
use here as a deliberately archaizing gesture.

sarvākārajñatāmārgaḥ śāsitrā yo'tra deśitaḥ|

dhīmanto vīkṣiṣīraṃs tam anālīḍhaṃ parair iti ||1||

smṛtau cādhāya sūtrārthaṃ dharmacaryāṃ daśātmikām |

sukhena pratipatsīrann ity ārambhaprayojanam ||2||

with thanks in advance for your observations and insights,
Matthew

Matthew T. Kapstein
Professor emeritus
Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, PSL Research University, Paris

Associate
The University of Chicago Divinity School

Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences

https://ephe.academia.edu/MatthewKapstein

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