REVIEWS
The
Aryan Home by Sri Kopalle Sivakameswara Rao. Published by the author at
This
is an attempt, as the author reveals in his introductory note, by a teacher,
after retirement after twenty-eight long years of service in a
The
author, with characteristic modesty, acknowledges his indebtedness to Pandit
Lakshmi Dhar Kalla of the
The
Call of the Jagadguru by
Sri R. Krishnaswami Aiyar, M. A., B. L., Tirunalveli,
with a Foreword by Dr. C. P. Ramaswami Aiyar.
(Published by Ganesh & Co.
Private Ltd. Pages 188. Price Rs. 4)
This
is a collection of the talks given by His Holiness, the late Sri Chandrasekhara Bharati Swami, on different occasions, over
a period of several months. Selected, classified and arranged in a meaningful
sequence, in chapters dealing with right living, pursuit of happiness, true
education, purification of the mind and need for strenuous effort, by a devoted
disciple, who has gathered the precious words as they dropped from the lips of
the master, and an accomplished savant, who had, by his previous publications
of a similar nature, proved his unique competence to transmit such words of
wisdom, the volume should be welcome to earnest souls all over the country and
abroad, eager for such spiritual nourishment and guidance in shaping their life
and conduct in the confusing atmosphere of the modern world, in conformity with
the basic principles of our traditional culture and religion of the land.
Such
guidance is available in this volume in the traditional form of sublime truths
uttered by a realised soul in simple homely similes
and anecdotes, addressed to devoted and beloved disciples.
It
is the broadcasting of such wisdom alone that can stem the tide of the alarming
fall in the moral standards of our society, which has to be arrested first, by
a strenuous national effort before we can expect any good results from other,
efforts of the nation for any kind of progress in any direction, economic,
educational, social and cultural. As Dr. C. P. Ramaswami Aiyar points out in
the preface, the author Sri R. Krishnaswami Aiyar deserves the thanks of every
one for having performed a valuable service to the nation and pious duty to the
departed sage with due reverence and affection.
Till We Meet by
Mikhail Naimy. (Published by The
Indian Institute of World Culture,
Till
We Meet is a collection of rather unconventional stories
written by Mikhail Naimy of
Almost
all stories deal with extraordinary characters–artists and people with rare
gifts. Leonardo in the story Till We Meet, kills
Baha with playing on the violin; M. Alphonse can
foresee the death of his host. The Hyena can convert gold into
ashes and ashes into gold. Perhaps, the most interesting
stories in this volume are–Earthquake, Defrosting the Earth, Hell and
Suicide.
Altogether,
Till We Meet is a collection of refreshingly original stories gracefully
written and remarkably charming and interesting. Mikhail Naimy
has a beautiful prose style and it is a treat to read his stories.
Diamond
Jubilee Souvenir of Messrs. G. A. Natesan &
Co.
Shashtiabdapurthi
in the life of an individual has long been regarded in our country as an
occasion not only for a pause and retrospect in life’s journey, but also as an
opportunity for spiritual rejuvenation for higher and nobler efforts.
Started
sixty years ago on the Vijayadasami Day in 1897, this
“One man firm” as Rajaji calls it, of Mr. G. A. Natesan
has established itself as a “great instrument for national education,” bringing
to the hands of the students and the scholars, and the aspirant, the master,
the worker, the politician and the administrator, cheap, ready-made monographs
on every aspect of our national life. Copious morsels of
knowledge which would otherwise have been dearly bought, and assimilated only
with infinite travail, thus became accessible to one and all
in a condensed and, if we may say so, a pre-digested form. Over a thousand
books, we are told, have issued from this enterprising firm of Publishers; and
a glance at the list will show how India’s Vedic, epic and classical
antiquity, as much as the living present, has had its share of attention.
As
Sir C. P. observes, these books are “a conspectus of the multiform progress and
development of
It
is not the foresight and judicious planning of a mere businessman that could
have elicited such meed of praise. To Mr. Natesan, this work of publication was a Tapas. He went abroad in search of knowledge, and
when he found it, shared it with all the world. He
accepted it wherever he found it; to him there was only
Those
on whom the burden now rests are aware of the new tasks and duties that await
them. In keeping the torch of knowledge bright, in their efforts at
dissemination of knowledge, the fervent prayers of one and all are with them.
Thus has been a story worth telling. The record is sweet and the promise
sweeter.
The
Souvenir is well got up with some rare photographs of Gandhiji and other
leaders. There are valuable articles on various subjects.
K. S. R.
Srimad
Bhagavadgita: (Text with
translation, introduction and appendices) by N. V. Gunaji,
B.A., LL. B., Crown 8-vo. size. Pp. 368. Price Rs. 3.
In
the introduction extending over 54 pages the translator raises some problems as
to the nature of Sanjaya, Sri Krishna and the Bhagavadgita, tries to answer some of them in his own way
and leaves off the others unanswered. The gospel preached by the author of the Bhagavadgita, the translator believes, is the “Samanvaya” or Synthesis of Bhakti, Jnana
and Karma Yogas.
B.K.R.
Kula Sekhara Mahipala Charitramu: by Sesham
Raghunatha Raya. Edited by
Sri T. Chandrasekharam, M. A., L. T., Curator,
Oriental Manuscripts Library,
The
poet Raghunatha Raya
intended to write the life history of a devotee of Lord Vishnu in “Misra Kavitabandha” (Cf. Pp.
3-14) and chose the King Kulasekhara, one of the
celebrated AI-wars of the Vaishnava Sampradaya as the hero of his poem, which was completed by
him with marvellous success.
Bhakti
is the predominant sentiment of the theme, while love in union and separation
occupies a subordinate position. The language and idiom, fancy and imagery,
figures of speech and sense of sound, and the descriptions in this
work, show the influence of the Telugu Prabandhas
like Amukta Malyada, Vasu Charitra and
Parijatapaharana on the poet to a great extent; and
assign him a place of honour among the poets of Prabandhas. Students of Telugu literature will ever be much
beholden to the authorities of the Oriental Manuscripts Library for the
publication of this precious gem of Telugu literature.
Bhavasarita by Vasudev
Bhaskar Thamale.
(Published by K. B. Dawale, Karnatak
Publishing House,
In
the preface to this collection of poems, Thamale
makes a reference to “Bhavalahari” his first poetic
collection published in 1932 and the warm reception it had from the readers.
While promising them no less an interesting collection he dedicates the book
under review to Saradadevi, the Goddess of learning.
The
collection ranges in subject matter from lullabys and
verses for children to poems for grown-ups and songs of philosophy. There are
certain interesting translations from English like “Athaya
Sundari” or La Belle Dame Sans Merci of Keats, “Lilli
Cha Bhugola” or Lelly’s
Globe of Charles Tennyson Turnet and “Amaratechya Pratitivareela Geet” or Ode on Intimations of Immortality from
Recollections of Early Childhood of Wordsworth, which are rare and valuable
gifts to Marathi literature. “Swatantrayasaptak”
and “Swatantrasamara” are two long poems on Freedom
and the Freedom Struggle which manifest a real patriotic spirit in the writer.
As
the poet has rightly pointed out in his preface, his poems are the outcome of
individuality and “circumstantiality”, blended
into a pleasing poetic expression which, of course, he has not failed to
achieve.
The
book is agreeably presented and in bold print. We offer our beauty
congratulations to Thammale for his second “feast of
thought.”