‘TRIVEN!’ HAS SHED LIGHT
ON MY PATH
BLESSED BE HER NAME!
The
celebration of the Silver Jubilee of Triveni in
Between
December 1927 when Triveni first saw the light of day at ‘Malabari House’, Madras, and November 1954 when she held
high festival in the Hall of the Kannada Sahitya Parishat
at Bangalore–named after the great Rajarshi of Modern
India, Sri Sri Krishna Rajendra Wadiyar–I
passed from youth to middle age, and from middle age into the distinguished
company of old men. An esteemed elder, Sri Navaratna
Rama Rao, welcomed me into that goodly band, for I had earned the right to be
with them by reaching my sixty-first birthday!
I
am tired, but happy. I feel like exclaiming, “I have done my job; now let Thy
servant rest.” But rest is not abstention from all work. It means work done
without the element of compulsion and the tyranny of the time-schedule. When
body and mind are overpowered by a sense of exhaustion, one must relax and seek
refreshment of the spirit, through contact with the best minds of all
ages–through study and contemplation. Out of that study might emerge something
of value to oneself and to those around him. Life in my little home-town, in
the old familiar surroundings, is without the strain that comes of hurry and
the invasion of multifarious engagements. I am deeply thankful for this
opportunity to recoup lost health, and to watch the progress of Triveni in
the coming years.
I
rejoice that it has been given to me to devote the best part of my life to the
cause of Indian Culture, and to secure the friendly co-operation of poets and
artists, thinkers and publicists in different parts of the country. I have
sometimes been asked why I ever launched Triveni, and what I sought to
achieve through this means. It is considered bad ‘form’ to quote oneself, but I
must recall what I wrote in Triveni, in September 1928, some months
after the inauguration of the Journal:
“Triveni,
as several friends of the Editor are aware, was started last December,
immediately after he left the Jatheeya Kalasala, Masulipatam, under very painful circumstances. He was in
search of some work that would fill the gaping void in his life, caused by his
separation from the dear institution he had prized above aught else. Triveni
is, therefore, an emotional necessity of his being–an object on which he
wishes to lavish all his love…..In his effort to make Triveni a worthy
exponent of the Indian Renaissance, he feels sure that all lovers of culture
will extend their co-operation in unstinted measure. It is the Editor’s firm
conviction that, like all earnest endeavours, Triveni is ultimately the
Lord’s work, and He, in His infinite wisdom and mercy, will vouchsafe to the
Editor, an humble and frail individual, the requisite strength, physical and
moral, to carry on his self-imposed but inexpressibly joyous task.
“Triveni
seeks to interpret the Renaissance movement as reflected in
the various linguistic units of
That
was a beautiful dream; and Triveni became my Dream-Child. She shed Light
on my Path. Today she is as real to me as little Giridhar
Gopal was to Mirabai or the sprightly lad Sri Ramachandra was to Saint Tyagaraja.
Life holds no greater joy than this.
Triveni
has been the means of winning for me the love and regard of
friends who consider themselves members of the Triveni family. There are
several whom I could name, but the greatest of them all is Sri Masti Venkatesa Iyengar, the head of the
During
this quarter of a century and more, I have worked with the members of the
Advisory Board, the Associate Editors, the contributors, and men and women of
goodwill everywhere. In dedicating this Silver Jubilee Number
to
the beloved memory of
Sri
C. JINARAJADASA
I have in mind all
those who loved Triveni and blessed her, and are now watching over her
from the Great Beyond.
May
Triveni flood the land with Love, Wisdom, and Power!
* Reprinted from the
Silver Jubilee Number of Triveni,
1954.