For centuries, until the consolidation of modern standard Hindi after
1900, the Hindi dialect known as Braj Bhāsā enjoyed great prestige as
the vehicle of the Krsna cult literature of northern India, as well as
for the brilliance of its secular literature. Most of this material was
in verse, although since the beginning of the last century we have had
knowledge of the existence of texts in Sanskritized Braj Bhāsā prose,
chiefly sectarian chronicles and commentaries, from a relatively early
date. In this, the earliest thorough analysis of a Braj Bhāsā text, Dr
McGregor presents one of the oldest known Braj Bhāsā prose texts: a Braj
commentary on the Sanskrit Nītiśataka of Bhartrhari, originally composed
about 1600. His detailed examination of the morphology, phonology and
syntax of its language casts light on the types of language that
underlie the Braj Bhāsā used in verse literature, and provide a
comparative basis for further studies of the prose produced in Braj and
in other Hindi dialects before the nineteenth century.