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The Story of the Irascible Yakṣa and the King Who Nearly Beheaded Himself in Dhanapāla's Tilakamañjarī*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2012

Extract

The Tilakamañjarī, Dhanapāla's poem in prose (gadyakāvya) is one of the masterpieces of classical Sanskrit literature and deserves to be better known. What he says in one of the introductory verses about his contemporary audience is also true about the readers of our time: “People, smelling danger, turn away from prose which contains a forest of unbroken lines (i.e. compounds filling whole lines) and lots of descriptions, as they keep away from the many-coloured tiger which lives in the dense Daṇḍaka forest”. Although Dhanapāla shows more restraint in his descriptions and in the use of alliteration and long compounds than his illustrious predecessor Bāṇa, the extremely intricate plot of the Tilakamañjarī might discourage those who otherwise appreciate Sanskrit poetry. I am certain, however, that once a taste for gadyakāvya is acquired all these deterring factors turn into sources of delight.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 2012

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Footnotes

*

Studies in Fabulous Creatures II. The first in my series Studies on Fabulous Creatures, was published as: Csaba Dezső, “Encounters with Vetālas, Studies on Fabulous Creatures I”, Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hung. 63.4 (2010), pp. 391–426. The research behind this article was supported by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA, project no. PD 78093).

References

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