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Wife awaits her Husband, Verse 76, Amaru Shataka by Amaru, early 17th century painting.

The Amaruśataka or Amarukaśataka (अमरुशतक, "the hundred stanzas of Amaru"), authored by Amaru (also Amaruka), is a collection of poems dated to about the 7th[1] or 8th century.[2]

The Amaruśataka ranks as one of the finest lyrical poetry in the annals of Sanskrit literature, ranking with Kalidasa and Bhartṛhari's Śṛngâraśataka. Its subject is mostly erotic love, including aspects such as love, passion, estrangement, longing, rapprochement, joy and sorrow, etc. Greg Bailey notes that it is "as much about the social aspects of courting, betrayal, feminine indignance and masculine self-pity as it is about sensuality".[1] The ninth-century literary critic Anandavardhana declared in his Dhvanyaloka that "a single stanza of the poet Amaru ... may provide the taste of love equal to what's found in whole volumes." Its verses have been used by poets and critics as examples and standards to judge other poems by. Andrew Schelling describes it as "love poetry original and vivid as that produced anywhere on the planet".[2]

Contents

[edit] Authorship

Not much is known about the life of Amaru. Traditional accounts attribute the work to King Amaru of Kashmir. The collection in its present form may well represent the work of more than one author—the poems that form part of the collection differ quite significantly across its different regional recensions.[3]

There are also a number of legends associating the collection with the philosopher Adi Shankara. One version occurs in his 14th century biography written by a follower, the Shankara-digvijaya. According to this version, during his debate with Maṇḍana Miśra, he was asked philosophical questions phrased in metaphors of love by the latter's wife, Ubhaya Bharati. Being celibate and therefore ignorant of the kama shastras, Shankara requested an adjournment. He then entered the recently-dead body of Amaru and spent a hundred days mastering the art of erotic love, before returning to defeat his opponent. He wrote the Amarushataka to memorialise his learning.[2]

Another version, given in Ravichandra's commentary on the Amarushataka, states that Shankara composed these poems to impart spiritual insight to the epicurean king Amaru, in metaphors he might understand. When this was misunderstood and mocked by the advisers at the court, Shnakara entered the body of Amaru and provided a spiritual exegesis of the poems.[2]

Accordingly, several manuscripts add colophons naming Shankara as the true author of the work, and Ravichandra, a mediaeval commentator on the Bengal recension of the Amarusataka, read metaphysical meanings into the verses.[4] Other legends also state that Amaru was the 101st reincarnation of a soul that had previously occupied a 100 women.[citation needed]

[edit] English Translations

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Bailey 2005, Introduction
  2. ^ a b c d Schelling 2004, Introduction
  3. ^ According to Lienhard, only around half the verses in the Amarusataka are common across its various regional versions. Lienhard 1984, pp. 92-93
  4. ^ Lienhard 1984, p. 93

[edit] Sources

  • Lienhard, Siegfried (1984), A history of classical poetry: Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit, History of Indian literature, v. 3, Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, ISBN 3447024259 



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