REVIEWS
The Heroic Argument–A Study of Milton’s Heroic
Poetry: By
Dr M. V. Rama Sarma. Macmillan & Co., Ltd., Madras. Price: Rs.22-50.
Milton
studies have reached a point where it would be difficult for any scholar to
achieve freshness and originality; yet men from India–so far removed from the
time and the culture which produced that consummate artist–have been able to
contribute vitally to Milton scholarship. Balachandran Rajan’s work has become
standard criticism, and in time Professor M. V. Rama Sarma’s Heroic Argument
will also find its due place in the select shelf of Milton criticism.
The
most difficult field for a foreigner is stylistic criticism, and Professor Rama
Sarma, who is currently Senior Professor of English, Dean of the Faculty of Arts,
and Principal of the University College in Sri Venkateswara University,
Tirupati, has wisely avoided this field. Instead he has chosen “to concentrate
on the thematic content of Milton’s
heroic poetry, and to trace the concept of heroism through the four long poems–Comus, Paradise Lost, Paradise
Regained, and Samson Agonistes.” Professor Rama Sarma brings to his
task not merely long experience as a research guide, but also a literary
apprenticeship of over twenty years. His first book on Milton–Paradise Lost: A Study–was published
as early as 1951. Heir as he is to the culture that produced the Ramayana and
the Mahabharata as well as the work of Kalidasa, what more congenial
theme could Professor Sarma have chosen than the concept of heroism?
Milton
was from his earliest years “a dedicated spirit singled out for holy purposes”
and so devoted himself to strenuous preparation for his poetic task by reading
at home till the early hours of the morning, scorning delights and living
laborious days at Cambridge, and finally totally immersed in study and
meditation at Horton–a veritable
II Pernseroso. It is no wonder that his indomitable spirit ever scared to the
loftiest heights, and that in the ripeness of experience he should choose the
ultimate of subjects–the place of Man in the Universe. In these four heroic
poems the consciousness of the ultimate predicament of Man underlies the
argument; and it is therefore not surprising that–to quote Professor Sarma–
the
Miltonic hero is one who resists evil, or one who exhibits remarkable powers of
patience, forbearance and endurance in the face of trials and tribulations, or
one who has within him mighty potentialities of martyrdom, or finally, one who can
transcend earthly limitations, conquer and subdue vice triumphantly and
gloriously.
Having
seized the heart of the Miltonic theme, Professor Sarma traces the growth of
the concept through the four poems he has chosen. Milton, as we know, did not
believe in “a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed.” His protagonists
in every case are engaged in a conflict reflected in the universe–the conflict
of good and evil. But Professor Sarma has shown that in every case Milton
rejoices in showing scenes of temptation terminating in the ultimate triumph of
virtue over vice.
Though
Camus celebrates Chastity, it is not the negative quality of physical
purity, but the positive, militant and dynamic virtue which Milton exemplifies:
Virtue
may be assail’d, but never hurt,
Surpriz’d
by unjust force, but not enthrall’d.
This virtue is personified in the Lady–one whom we would today call a teen-ager–who is able to withstand all Comus’
sophistry in the great temptation scene.
Professor
Sarma devotes the three central chapters to the examination of ‘the heroic
argument as found in Paradise Lost–things’ unattempted in prose or rhyme.
Milton’s aim is to justify the ways of God to men and hence he is characteristically
argumentative–so different from
Dante’s vision. He shows how, trained in the subtleties of the schools at
Cambridge, Milton treads his way between the Scylla of Free-will and the
Charybdis of Predestination to present the Puritan view-point on God’s way. Yet
the virtues that Milton presents as heroic are notably different from the wrath
of stern Achilles or the rage of Turnus–‘the
better fortitude of patience, and heroic martyrdom to vanquish by wisdom,
hellish wiles,’ Man’s dharma in other words, is to possess implicit
faith in God, depending on His grace, finally attaining regeneration through a
life of patient right-doing and obedience to His Will. This is the state of
Adam and Eve as they leave Paradise hand in hand, Adam and Eve however are the
only protagonists that fail under the temptation that is presented among the
four poems, and of course Book IX of Paradise Lost is one of the Highlights of
the epic.
Samson
Agonistes embodies
the process of regeneratien. At the beginning we find Samson ‘eyeless in Gaza,
at the mill with slaves’ at the lowest ebb of his spiritual power, though his strength
has returned. He feels abandoned by God and is tempted first to arraign God’s
treatment of himself, then to yield once more to wiles of Dalila, and finally
to prove himself God’s champion by engaging Harapha the Philistine giant in a
trial of strength. The resistance to temptation gradually builds up Samson’s
moral power till he seems to hear once again the ‘inner voice’ when the
Philistine lords send for him to sport before them on their holiday:
Be
of good courage, I begin to feel
Some
rousing motions in me which dispose
To
something extraordinary my thoughts.
Samson goes forth to destroy the Philistines and
be destroyed himself:
Samson
hath quit himself
Like
Samson, and heroicly hath finish’d
A
life heroic.
The basic elements of temptation, and
tribulation patiently borne to final regeneration are all seen clearly in this
poem.
Most
striking is Professor Sarma’s presentation of Paradise Regained as not a
poem of action–but as a
philosophic poem. Once more Milton uses Jesus’ temptation in the wilderness as
the central action–vividly set
forth with all the imaginative power of the Master. And again we find that this
sublime hero not only vanquishes his Adversary by ‘deeds of peace, by wisdom
eminent, by patience, temperance’ but thereby accomplishes the divine mission
of recovering the hope of Paradise for all mankind.
The
Heroic Argument contains
valuable exposition and criticism of the thematic element in Milton’s heroic
poems because of Professor Sarma’s careful and sound analysis of Milton’s mind
and temperament. There is little doubt that the eyes of both lay reader and
student will be opened to new lines of thought and interpretation of these four
poems. We would only wish that an index could have been added. A paper back edition
may bring the price level down to the level of the serious student and of the
junior lecturer; for the book will make a valuable addition to their shelves.
Its clear exposition and sound scholarship will always give satisfaction and
win for itself a place in Milton criticism in India.
–Dr S. P. APPASAMY
All in All: By M. Chalapathi Rau. Vyasa publications,
12 Thambuchetty Street, Madras-1. Price: Rs. 15.
The
art of sketch-writing has not been much in vogue in our country with only attempts
few and far between in the fairly continuous history of Indo-Anglian
literature. Sustained pursuit of such literary metier requires no doubt
absorbed wooing, if the portraits presented have to provide an enjoyable treat
in penetrative analysis and sound assessment of character. M. Chalapathi Rau
has now been an editor for years of an important daily, and has had numberless
occasions to view politicians and patriots objectively winning enviable
reputation for his command of a powerful style in English language. It is,
therefore, legitimate to expect of him in dealing with leading personalities of
both this country and outside, quite an hour of unalloyed pleasure and
stimulation of spirits.
Here
are forty-two sketches with Sri V. V. Giri, the President of India, taking the
place of honour and ending with the celebrated Walt Disney of international
fame in the film world. In between are found almost all the notable figures who
have compelled world-attention in recent times. There is no particular order or
chronological arrangement in these sketches, and one naturally stumbles upon personages as far removed from
each other as Jayaprakash Narayan and Mao Tse-Tung or Josip Broz Tito and
Winston Churchill, to mention a few instances. Yet none, delineated in these
pages, happens to be any the less important in his contemporary value to the
other or to the world at large.
Further,
the sketches vary much in their length, and some of them appear to have been
specially written for occasions to mark birth-centenaries of great leaders of
the past such as Gokhale, Tilak or Malaviya. Still one cannot escape a feeling
of full justice having been done to some of the subjects herein included, as Dr
Radhakrishnan and Mohammed Ali Jinnah. They do certainly compensate for the
somewhat scrappy and short ones upon equally deserving subjects such as Sastri
or Govind Vallabh Pant. Also an occasional surprise gains upperhand on us when
the ever-bubbling humour of Sarojini Naidu has not been hinted at all in a
sketch otherwise one or the best here.
These
minor points of difference apart, there is no denying the vivid portraiture and
power of expression which mark the entire writing from cover to cover. A
subtler and clearer analysis of Churchill’s talents is difficult to expect from
one who was not on the same ‘dinner terms’ with him as with some others who
take their place in this galaxy of famous individuals. Perhaps, Chalapathi Rau
could have done greater justice to the art itself, had he consciously sat at it
with the purpose of bringing out a book of sketches.
Indeed,
we cannot close this review without making special mention of Laxman’s drawings
which as the author himself has rightly remarked are ‘parallel portraits’,
though his ‘Sastri’ seems the only exception to his mastery of the art of
caricature.
–K. CHANDRASEKHARAN
Studies in Modern Indian History–Number
one: Edited
by B. R. Nanda and V. C. Joshi. Published for Nehru Memorial Museum and Library
by Orient Longman Ltd., 315, Asaf Ali Road, New Delhi-1. Price: Rs. 30.
From
the plethora or popular studies flooding the book market, Indian nationalism
might well seem an over-written subject. Academic researchers of the familiar
variety could, however, invest the most commonplace of themes with a mystic
aura that could scare the general reader away. It is not an uncommon experience
with the serious reader that what is eminently readable is not always equally reliable
and what is authoritative and reliable in data is not particularly readable.
The problem of the Indian scholar, who does not want to be dubbed esoteric is
to combine in himself the two qualities of reliability and readability to an
equal measure. The papers on aspects of Indian nationalism, sponsored by the
Nehru Memorial Museum and Library amply fill the bill in this respect.
The
nine essays included in the volume comprise studies in the rise of Indian
nationalism in the first quarter or this century and economic ideas as well as
perspectives on economic development. Two of them are studies in leadership,
falling into the first category. All of them are substantially the texts of
lectures, originally delivered under the auspices of the Nehru Memorial Museum
and Library, and suitably revised by their authors for publication. Scholarly
and well-documented, with an objective approach, they are all marked by a
lucidity that is their main attraction for the general reader.
In
his detailed examination of the Congress split at Surat in 1907, Dr Bimal
Prasad tries to be fair to the Moderates as well as the Extremists. He
certainly reinforces his observations with relevant quotations from the
speeches and resolutions. But the reviewer cannot help going away with the
impression that the author’s sympathies lay with the Extremists. From his
account, one is led to conclude that the Moderates were far being moderate in
their manner, and some of them, in fact, did precipitate the split by their
uncompromising stand and aggressive behaviour. On the other hand, Tilak, the
accredited leader of the Extremists, appears a picture of moderation and sweet
reasonableness.
The
popular response to the Rowlatt Satyagraha, of 1919, is approached from a new
angle by Dr Ravindra Kumar. He finds how the response was particularly
impressive in the Punjab and Gujarat, for very different, even contradictory,
reasons. In providing the mass base for the Satyagraha, Gandhiji did not choose
to tamper with the people’s traditional social loyalties and distinct group
interests. He was able to draw into active politics social groups, which had
been inactive before 1919, by adopting “the politics of the social pyramid and
the ideology of Romanticism.”
The
Pericles–Sophocles parallel
from ancient Greece is happily invoked by Prof. R. K. Das Gupta in spotlighting
the Nehru–Tagore rapport as part of the cultural phenomenon
in the making of new India.
Mr.
B. R. Nanda’s study of the role of C. F. Andrews in the growth of modern Indian
nationalism is among the most perceptive and precise that this reviewer has
come across. “He emerges”, says Mr. Nanda, “not only as Mahatma Gandhi
described him, as a great Englishman and a great Christian, but as a pioneer
builder of bridges between embattled races and nations, without which the future
of mankind would be black indeed.”
Mr.
Nanda’s study of the personality of Andrews is out of the common run of
personality sketches popular with political journalism. It is a brilliant essay
in interpretation. He does not follow the beaten track, and remain content with
the stock image of Andrews as a saintly English eccentric, an inveterate
do-gooder, ready to go places, where he
is wanted. It is his thesis that having regard to the basic assumption of Satyagraha, which was one of a change of
heart on the adversary through love and suffering, the fact of
Andrews was an essential component of the Gandhian ethic. “If Andrews needed a
Gandhi. Gandhi also needed an Andrews.” He looks upon him as a
symbol, and a most necessary one, in a
mass movement which posed issues
on a moral plane and needed to sterilise
anger and hatred.
The general reader would cherish this volume
if only for the last two essays (by Prof. Das Gupta and Mr. Nanda), which he is sure to find as delightful as any he could get on the subject.
–D. ANJANEYULU
Foundations of Indian Philosophy:
By Balbir
Singh. Orient Longman Ltd., 3/5
Asaf Ali Road. New Delhi-1. Price:
Rs. 27-50.
The
laudable task the author of this serious study has set before him
is not only to attempt
an acceptable interpretation of
the Indian tradition in Philosophy, but also to endeavour
to provide answers to all those objections
which rest on
misunderstandings.
In
the author’s view, the foundations which clearly reflect the speculative
genius of the main systems of Indian thought
are metaphysical, religious and
ethical. The entire edifice of Hindu thought rests on the notion of
moral law–named Rta, Dharma, and Apurva–and also considered as the ultimate reality by all main systems of Philosophy with but shades of difference. The Words Rta, Dharma and
Apurva connote at once
the metaphysical, religious and
ethical ideals. After a critical exposition of the relevant tenets of systems of
Indian Philosophy in the first
seven chapters of the book, the author concludes that ethics, religion and metaphysics are the three constituents of
that reality which is the direct
concern of a man in his quest
for the highest good, and that
they form the main foundations of
Indian Philosophy.
The
assumptions of the western critics that
the Indian Philosophy is at
bottom nothing more than theology, that there is no place for ethics and
morals in Hinduism and Indian
Philosophy, that the law
of Karma lacks justification
and that there is no room for the freedom of the human will,
are rebutted by the author
in a remarkable way. In the chapter entitled
“The Western Counterparts” it is
shown that the ideals of souls becoming ‘most like God’ as in Plato, of
the souls becoming divine in comparison as in Aristotle; of intellectual love of God as in Spinoza, and harmony of the individual soul with the divine will as
in Kant would seem to correspond closely to the idea of Saadharmyataa of the Gita, Saamyataa of the Naiyaylkas, Niyoga Siddha of the Prabhakaras and self-realisation
of Saukara. The author’s criticism of
the views of Sankara and the
Upanishads on page 32 and 33 are to be reconsidered. A study of this book
enables the readers to meet some of the charges laid against Indian Philosophy
and Hinduism by western critics.
–B. KUTUMBA RAO
The Gita in the Light of Modern Science: By R. B. Lal. Somaiya
publications Private Ltd., Bombay. Price: Rs. 20.
A
product of life-long study of the Gita, this exposition–chapter by chapter–aims
at finding the common grounds of agreement between this ancient text and the
findings of modern science. Sri Lal approaches the Gita as a guide to everyday
life–among other things–and
discusses how far its main teachings are corroborated by science approaching
the Reality from the other end. He draws attention to the Gita emphasising “the
oneness, the wholeness, and indivisibility of the reality of existence, and the
interpenetration and interdependence of all seemingly separate entities. The
morality that follows and the ethics of conduct which evolve are but
corollaries of the facts of the unitive existence of all that seems separate
and diverse. “He stresses” the double but indivisible aspect of reality–matter and spirit, energy and
consciousness, being and becoming.”
Sri
Lal draws upon recognised authorities in his study and liberally quotes from
them. He focusses the interest on the reconciliation effected by the Gita
between man and society, world and God, mind and Spirit.
He
concludes: “The scientific, cosmopolitan and humanitarian religion of the Gita
is the world’s greatest
need today.”
–M. P. PANDIT
Vidyasagar: By Santosh Kumar Adhikari. Rupa and Co.,
15, Bankim Chatterjee Street, Calcutta. Price: Rs. 6-00.
In
the heyday of British rule it was not at all uncommon for Indians to be
subjected to humiliation by their European superiors in office. Once when
Vidyasagar called in the office-room of his Principal (of the Sanskrit College
where he was teaching), Mr Kerr, the latter received him with his legs
stretched out on the table. But Vidyasagar was not a man to pocket the insult.
Next time Mr Kerr dropped into his room, Vidyasagar kept his legs on the table
throughout the meeting. When the Principal felt incensed and demanded an explanation,
the intrepid Professor wrote:
“I
thought that we (natives) were an uncivilised race quite unacquainted with
refined manners of receiving a gentleman visitor. I learnt the manners of which
Mr. Kerr complains from the gentleman himself a few days ago when I had
occasion to call on him. My notions of refined manners being thus formcd from
the conduct of an enlightened, civilised, European, I behaved as respectfully
towards me, as he had himself done.”
This
is one of the notable incidents in the life
of Ishwara Chandra Vidyasagar narrated by the author in his beautifully
written biography of this celebrated father of Indian Renaissance in the last
century. His fearless nature, social conscience, broadness of mind and heart
and his deep scholarship are brought out with skill. The opposition that he had
to face from the conservatives and reactionary elements in society when he
launched upon reform measures like widow-remarriage,
prevention of unequal marriages, etc., is described.
In
an interesting chapter the writer describes the memorable meeting between Sri
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa and Vidyasagar, each surpassing the other in humility of heart so characteristic
of the great.
A
work that deserves to be translated into several languages.
–M. P. PANDIT
The Narrative Pattern in Ernest Hemingway’s
Fiction: By Dr Chaman Nahal. Vikas Publications, Delhi. Price: Rs.
30.
Ernest
Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize
in 1954 for his excellent novel. The Old Man and the Sea; and
thus he acquired a unique place in the galaxy of American novelists. He was a
fond hunter in the wild forests of Africa and a delightful observer of the
bull-fighting sport, an irrepressible talker and a true admirer of those who
kept silent: consequently appears a fascinating alteration of ‘action’ and’ ‘inaction’
in his fiction. Since his death in 1961, Hemingway has been much decried and
neglected. Dr Chaman Nahal, perhaps breathing his inspiration from the creative
critic, Carlos Baker, revives interest in Hemingway. Employing the running metaphor of ‘systolic-diastolic’, he
exposes the hitherto- unknown importance of the alternating action and inaction
in Heminway’s fiction.
In
the introduction, Dr Nahal says that the moment of inaction is a pause which is
like ‘caesura’ in verse. It is a moment of passivity–physical or mental–rather
creative passivity, a state of inertia which is the result of the preceding
phase of physical action. In this passivity, the Hemingway, hero finds ‘a
greater fulfilment than in heroic action’–‘finds
a bridge which connects him with the universe, with the mysterious rhythm of
the cosmos.’ As Dr Nahal rightly observes, although Hemingway acknowledges his indebtedness
to Mark Twain, he belongs to
the great ‘Hawthorne-Poe-Melville tradition’
where the heroes concern themselves with
darkness. He points out that in Hemingway darkness is not only structurally approached, but his
hero’s moral awareness stems from his consciousness of the dark mystery of the
Universe. In the boundless mystery of the Universe, man has his own place of
glory. Projecting this higher vision through the moments of his hero’s creative
passivity Hemingway surpasses that tradition. The Hemingway hero is involved in
a double action: the systolic or physical action akin to the black mystery of
life, and the diastolic or passive action in which he remains stunned at the
revelations of the dark mystery of the Universe.
Dr
Nahal locates Hemingway’s position among the writers of the ‘Complex Twenties’
like James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, and T. S. Eliott, with
regard to the complex structure of his novels. He critically illustrates the
complex systolic-diastolic actions in the works and exposes the beauties
implied in the diastolic moments of the heroes. Simultaneously Dr Nahal
discusses Hemingway’s powerful characterization and shows the charming
continuity in his themes.
In
the conclusion. Dr Nahal traces the various influences (of Journalism, James Joyce,
Gertrude Stein, and Ezra Pound) that contributed to the ‘make-up’ or Hemingway’s
two-beat mode of narrative, and explains how it is more than ‘Kiplingesque.’
Kipling has eliminated too-obvious portions to make his stories structurally
neat and robust: Hemingway’s structural pattern is consciously based on his ‘iceberg
theory’–‘giving certain
sections of the narrative a different rhythm’ as in the diastolic pauses–which is his unique contribution to
the treasures of fiction.
Notwithstanding
some teasing repetition, Dr Nahal’s book affords a comprehensive impression of
Hemingway’s achievement as a fictionist. The striking merit of the book is that
the expression is simple and direct–free
from ‘obscurity and pointlessness’ which is often seen in similar writings. It
is a book which should be read by every student or lover of English literature.
–Dr K. V. S. MURTI
Lectures on Comparative Philosophy: By Dr P. T. Raju. University
of Poona, Ganeshkhind, Poona-7. Price: Rs. 2-50.
These
are lectures delivered under the auspices of the University of Poona by the
learned author in 1969, now brought out in book form. The lectures are
remarkable in that clarity of thought and lucidity of expression vie with each
other in these pages.
At
the outset, the author points out that by comparative philosophy we mean the
comparative study of Eastern and Western philosophies. “It is for producing the
unity of meaning and purpose of life with reference to a comprehensive and
integrated system of values that comparative philosophy should have primarily
undertaken and these values should have primary bearings to man.” The primary
interest of comparative philosophy is human and humanistic.
The
author says that to know oneself adequately and fully and meet the needs of the whole of human nature, one
has to know both the East and the West, when only can every vein
and artery of man’s being be known.
And only then can we know their
needs and meet them. The author
rightly concludes that any study in comparative philosophy
should have as its ultimate aim, the
coordination, complementation and
synthesis of the concepts and
doctrines of both the East and the West.
–S. SHANKARANARAYANAN
Gleanings from the Gita:
By P. R. Krishnaswamy
Iyyer. Published by P. R.
Venkata Raghavan, 8 Ellappa Naicken Street, Komaleeswaranpet, Madras-2. Price: Rs. 2.
Highly appreciated by Dr S. Radhakrishnan and Dr C. P.
Ramaswami Iyyer and others, this book provides
an interesting introduction to the study of the Bhagavadgita; the message and the truths proclaimed wherein are examined in the light of modern scientific
theories and compared with the thoughts
of the Upanishads Bible, Shakespeare, Emerson and other Western thinkers. The latter half
of the book is more
illuminating, scholarly and
absorbing. The sale proceeds of
the book go to the construction
of a temple. We commend this book to
all lovers of the Bhagavadgita and to those who lecture on the Gita in particular.
–B. KUTUMBA RAO
C. F. Andrews–His Life and Times.
By P. C. Roy Chaudhury. Somaiya Publications
Private Ltd., Bombay. Price: Rs. 20.
One
curious aspect of Indian nationalism has
been the fact that it was never sectarian. The Indian
National Congress was founded by an Englishman,
A. O. Hume. At the height of
the Nationalist Movement in the 1920’s, one of the foremost leaders of the Congress
Movement was C. F. Andrews, another great Englishman who answered the call of love
and came over to India
as a member of the Cambridge Mission and later on discarded the clerical robes in order to serve
India and her people in the
manner he thought best. Andrews
was close to Mahatma Gandhi and to Rabindranath Tagore.
Yet, he never hesitated to express his disagreement with Gandhiji himself. He
pleaded for complete Swaraj but
opposed the Non- co-operation
Movement. He was a great Christian but believed that
Christianity of the Sermon on the Mount had its roots in the Indian soil. He considered India the mother of the human spirit. Gandhiji
admired him greatly.
The
book under review is a pioneering and scholarly venture. It traces the role of C. F. Andrews in the Nationalist Movement right
from the time he landed in India in 1904
till his very end in 1940. Andrews had a leading role in the Labour Unrest in Eastern India in the ’twenties
and the book sketches in detail
the course of the Labour
Movement in that Period, with
particular reference to the views of Andrews himself. The relationship between Andrews
and Mahatma Gandhi and Andrews and Tagore is examined in depth.
The
author is the Editor of the Gandhi Centenary publications and also the head of
the Gandhi Reference Bureau. It is a valuable contribution to the study of the
Nationalist Movement of India.
–T. C. A. RAMANUJAM
Studies in Maratha History: By Dr A. Pawar. Published
by the Shivaji University, Kolhapur Price: Rs. 10.
In
this volume Dr A. G. Pawar of the Shivaji University, Kolhapur, brings to light
a number of interesting facts relating to Maratha history. These studies are
based on hitherto unpublished source material.
Some
of the papers are devoted to the career of Shivaji while the majority of them
are related to incidents connected with Maratha history after the establishment
of the European settlements in Western India. In an interesting article on the
meaning and the use of the word ‘johar’, the author proves that it was a word
which originally stood for a respectable mode of obeisance which was later converted
into a salutation offered by a servant to his master. There are also articles
on Aurangzeb and Nadirshah, the destroyer of the Mughal Empire in India.
Finally a few research papers clarify forgotten treaties and practices of the
period under review.
This
volume will not only be useful for those interested in Maratha history but also
for the scholars who are interested in understanding the relations of the European
powers with the Marathas. The language and presentation are uniformly good. The
essays, however, could have been arranged in a chronological fashion.
–Dr K. SUNDARAM
Evolution, Genetics and Man: By Dobzhansky. Wiley
Eastern Private Ltd., New Delhi.
To
write a technical book easily intelligible even to a non-technical reader calls
for as much technical expertise as skill of presentation. The author of the
present book, a well-known biologist, possesses both in abundance. The result:
a highly interesting book with a good deal of information.
Beginning
with the meaning of cosmic, biological and human evolutions, the author goes on
to explain the characteristics of living matter with emphasis on “self-reproduction”
and “wisdom of organism”, in establishing harmonious relations with its environment
by “homeostatic” reactions. This is followed by the hypotheses concerning the
origin of life and the role of principles of vitalism and mechanism in
understanding life phenomena. The author gives a lucid explanation of
chromosomes (which are “gene carriers”) vis-a-vis their behaviour in
cell-division and sex-determination. The role of mutations is described at
length in absorbing exposition.
Evolution
under domestication is depicted with innumerable examples of domesticated wild
plants and animals. The chapter on “Evolution of Sex” gives a vivid account
from the beginning of sexual instinct in primitive algae to the most complex
behaviour patterns of developed animals. The example of slipper-limpet in which
the sex of the individuals (i.e., whether male, female or hermaphrodite) is
determined by their position in a colony is fascinating.
An
outline history of the life in by-gone ages revealed by fossils is described
with reference to the horse whose ancestor lived 55 million years ago. An
account of the much discussed and controversial story of human evolution from
the fossils assigned to Australopithecus (about a million years old) to the
onset of Homo Sapiens (the present man) is presented in an easy-to-understand
style. Development of the brain is described as the moving force in human
evolution along with the “culture” man has developed from time immemorial. The
present human diversity with as many as 30 races spread over the length and
breadth of the globe is explained with the help of excellent illustrations. Man
is labelled by the author as the “pinnacle of evolution” in whom two evolutions–biological and cultural–are combined in a unique process
never witnessed before.
Explanatory
suggestions for further reading assist the specialising student in exploring
problems of evolutionary biology beyond the limits of the present book.
–K. V. SATYANARAYANA
MALAYALAM
Vida: By Vyloppilli Sreedhara Menon. Published by
Sahitya Pravaraaka Co-operative Society, Ltd., Kottayam. Price: Rs. 3-25.
“Vida”
meaning farewell, is a collection of thirty-seven scintillating Malayalam poems
by Vyloppilli Sreedhara Menon. What does the poet bid farewell to? He rings out
the old and brings in the new. He says good-bye to the age of inequality and
exploitation, welcoming with revolutionary fervour the advent of a new era when
the beauty of nature heralds social and individual justice. He is a rank
realist. Vyloppilli is a poet of the soil. Kerala provides the scene and the
scenery. The pains and pleasures, the facts and reconciliations, the joys and
jealousies, the facts and fantasies of Kerala rural life are painted here with
a rare insight inspiration. Poets turn out to be unintentional prophets because
of the vision they are endowed with, and Vyloppilli stands in forefront of
those who envision a revolutionary future.
Each
piece in “Vida” is a poetic masterpiece. Apt images come jostling with one
another and provide the mould, the back drop and sometimes a shroud for what
the poet has to present. In an English commentary on a Malayalam book of poems,
it is difficult to illustrate the art with apt quotations, except through the
rather lame translations. True poetry, I believe, is untranslatable language,
and though we may have to remain content with the second best when we can’t get
at the best, I do not desire to dilute the effect of the original with random
translation efforts in this short treatise. I commend “Vida” confidently to any
lover of literature.
–DR R. RABINDRANATH
MENON, I A S
TAMIL
Kavya Ramayanam: By K. S. Srinivasan.
Pari Nilayam, 59 Broadway, Madras-1. Price: Rs. 12.
A
sense of relief and satisfaction fills our hearts on finishing this very
enjoyable comparative study of the two poets, Valmiki and Kamban. In the
present-day context where almost every student of Kamban in Tamil Nad, does not
merely stop with elaborating his appreciation of Kamban but ventures to
contrast him with Valmiki and tries to make out that Kamban has vastly improved
upon the earlier poet, we have in this author an enviable balance of mind to
view the two epics without any bias or prejudice. On the other hand, the way the
whole Ramayana has been surveyed here with enough references to both the
Sanskrit and Tamil verses and a true Rasika’s endeavour to share with his
readers the individual excellences of the two master-minds, adds indeed much to
our own understanding of the genuine attempt of the author to unravel the
beauties of both, without in any measure to underrate one at the expense of the
other.
He
starts with a statement that the story is the same, the entire episodes are the
same, the underlying thought is the same except for certain deviations in the
story in the later poet, but in the quality of poetic merit each has his own
immense contribution to make in creative literature. What more do we need? We
are not set upon any business to induce the two poets to run a race for the purpose
of being judged who ultimately wins. We are grateful that two such eminent
poets belong to us and have given us lasting fulfillment.
In
a short review, it will be inadequate to convey to the readers how the author has with much literary discernment and critical
appreciation delved into the two epics and brought forth selections from them
which easily convince us of his capacity to assess the merits of both.
Still, we may not always share some of his reactions to particular passages as
not quite felicitous of analogy or appropriate of sentiment.
On
the whole it is a profound indication of the author’s cultural steadfastness
that nowhere does he stress anything in disagreement beyond a slight suggestion
of it. Within 385 pages of enlivening Tamil writing the true Rasika has come
out with his unquestionable claim on our attention.
–K. CHANDRASEKHARAN
TELUGU
Lakshana Saara Sangrahamu of Kuchimanchi
Timmana: Edited
by Kovela Sampatkumaraachaarya. A. P. Sahitya Akademi, Kala Bhavan, Saifabad,
Hyderabad-4. Price: Rs. 6.
Lakshana
Saara Sangrahamu, presently
under review, can be described as an advanced work on grammar and prosody
written in the classical tradition of verse form. Kuchimanchi Timmana, the
author of the work, flourished between 1684-1757 A. D. He was an erudite
scholar and held the titles “Kavisaarvabhauma” and “Abhinava Vaaganusaasana”.
His poetical works like Neelasundari Parinayamu, Acca Tenugu Ramayanam, etc.,
are well-known to the Telugu readers.
The
present work was first published in 1914 by Nandiraju Chalapathi Rao Garu at
Manjuvani Press, Ellore, and has not been available to the reading public for a
long time. The work is important not only for this reason but for others as well.
The author, though a grammarian, was not a theorist and this work is no formal
text-book on Telugu grammar. He was practical in his approach, depended on the
grammatical usages of earlier poets and produced a compendium of grammatical
and prosodiacal usages with the sole aim of lending versatility to the advanced
student. Though he followed Appakavi he not only improved on his work but also
corrected him.
As
it was not intended to be a formal text-book on grammar prosody, it touches
upon the rare and unacquainted usages only. For this very reason the varieties
of ‘yati’ and ‘praasa’ have been treated in any orderly manner; nor any
categorisation attempted.
A
word about one or two lapses. Though apparently minor, they are important. The
Manjuvani Press edition of 1914 showed of the source books cited by Timmana,
along with the names of the authors of the respective books. The present
edition chooses to give merely the names of the books: thus Kannappa
Charitramu of Kanchiraju Suraya, Indumati Kalyanamu of Angara
Basavaiah, Bahulaaswa Charitramu of
Kakamaanuraya, Vasanta Vilasamu of Nachana Somana, Dwadasaraja Charitramu of Kattavarapu
Chittiraju, Sumati Sataka
of Bhimakavi are mentioned without the names of the respective authors on pages 79, 13, 66, 129, 138 and 215
respectively. In view of the
fact that a work like Vasanta Vilasa is not extant but is attributed to Nachana
Somana and the authorship of Sumati
Sataka is still highly controversial, the editor would have done
better had he retained the names of the
authors also. That would have been academically proper. In case the manuscript
copies consulted did not contain these names, at least that could have been
indicated.
The
book contains a scholarly but lucid review of the subject matter by the learned editor and also four useful
appendices at the end.
The
editor and the A. P. Sahitya Akademi are to be congratulated for bringing out a
well-produced edition of not
so readily available a work as this.
–Prof. SALVA
KRISHNAMURTHI
Sooktimuktaavali: Compiled by Mahidhara Ramamohana
Rao. Kaalachakram Prachuranalu, P.O. Nattarameswaram, via., Penumantra. West
Godavari District, Andhra Pradesh. Price: R8. 12-50.
Here
is an excellent compilation of two
thousand Sanskrit aphorisms culled from two hundred ancient Sanskrit works–including the Vedas and the
Upanishads. The selection is exhaustive as well as consummate. The compiler has
taken great pains in collecting the aphorisms, in arranging them under several
sections, in giving the gist of each
aphorism in readable Telugu and thus making them understandable to the lay man.
The index appended, giving the beginning of
each sloka, has enhanced the utility of the book.
As
the wisdom propounded in the aphorisms is based on actual experience of the great Rishis, the validity is
emphatic and eternal, pragmatic and practical, vibrant and veridical. So long as
the characteristic pathological constituents of the human blood are what they are, the historic and
fundamental antecedents and behaviour of
man remain and will continue to remain as they were depicted by our
sages. As such the book under reference is a valuable companion to the present
day seekers of knowledge,
writers, speakers and students as well. It richly deserves a place in every
library–both public and
private.
It
is gratifying to learn that the publishers propose to bring out an edition with
the text in Devanagari script and the commentary in Hindi and English, so as to
be useful to non-Telugu knowing readers. The venture is highly commendable and we
wish the publishers all success.
–BHAVARAJU