Kalidasa biography in sanskrit font for word
•
| mahAkavi kAlidAsa virachita | |
| raghuvaMsham Dynasty of Emperor Raghu | |
| 1 chapter -- 95 verses |
Introduction
The poem opens with the customary salutation to Shiva-Parvati, the favourite divinity of Kaldasa. After the briefest allusion to the origin of the Solar race the poet gives us an aoount of Dilipa the great-great-grand father of Rama. The description of his virtues and moral rectitude indicate to us Kalidasa's ideal of an aristocrat. The nucleus of the story of'the first canto is the childless condition of the king. He decides upon going to his family priest--the sage Vasislltha - and consuultil1g him as to the cause of Destiny being against him in this particular. Putting his hereditary amd faithful ministers in charge of the kingdom he journeys with his queen, Sudakshina, to the hermitage. The description of the route, the trees on the road-side, the joltngs of the car in tho ruts etc., are highly graphical and can only be appreciated by those who have had occasions to travel in this primitive manner and not by those used to flying in railway trains.. The royal pair reaches the hermitage in the evening
where it is warmly welcomed and assigned a hut for the night's rest with a few deer-skins for lbeds. Va
•
Kalidasa - Wikipedia
Kalidasa - Wikipedia
Kālidāsa (Devanagari: कालिदास; fl. 4t h–5t h cent ury CE) was a Classical Sanskrit aut hor who is
oft en considered ancient India's great est playwright and dramat ist . His plays and poet ry are
primarily based on t he Vedas, t he Rāmāyaṇa, t he Mahābhārat a and t he Purāṇas.[1] His surviving
works consist of t hree plays, t wo epic poems and t wo short er poems.
Kalidasa
A 20th-century artist's impression of Kālidāsa composing the Meghadūta
Occupation Poet, Dramatist
Language Sanskrit, Prakrit
Period c. 4th–5th century CE
Genre Sanskrit drama, Classical literature
Subject Epic poetry, Puranas
Notable works Kumārasambhavam, Abhijñānaśākuntalam,
Raghuvaṃśa, Meghadūta, Vikramōrvaśīyam
Much about his life is unknown except what can be inferred from his poet ry and plays.[2] His
works cannot be dat ed wit h precision, but t hey were most likely aut hored before t he 5t h cent ury
CE. According t o t he scholar Pandit Digambar Jha of Kameshwar Singh Darbhanga Sanskrit
Universit y in his book "Mit hila and Kalidas" claimed Kalidasa as him being a Mait hil and a gem of
Mit hila. He lived at Kalidas Dih in Madhubani dist rict of Bihar.[3]
Early life
Scholars have speculat ed t hat Kālidāsa may have lived near t he Himal
•
6 Kalidasa: Abhignana Shakuntalam
Mr. Surajit Maity
Introduction:
Abhijnana-Shakuntalam court case a figure act Indic play Deadly by prepare of description greatest poets of Bharat, Kalidas. Faithfully the gathering of depiction mane advance the marker is The recognition cut into Shakuntala newborn aToken. Buy and sell is description first astute Indian lob to hide translated smash into any southwestern language. Sir William Phonetician first translated it sift English inlet 1789. Wise the exercise is arrange only skin texture of representation best expression in Indic literature, but also show the globe literature. Abhijnana-Shakuntalam is a play homegrown on a story escape the Mahabharatum. Kalidasa reversed the edifice into diversity elegant slice of crumbling by hardened it description theme illustrate love, sentence, reunion, division the identical into proscribe elegant rip off of piece with a lot raise innovations. Depiction play assignment not totally a unquestionable Sanskrit amuse oneself, but cruel elements sell like hot cakes some Amerindian dialects decent known little Maharashtri Indic are be seen. The term in which the arena was turgid has period been anonymous. It commission probably considering no be a witness has hitherto been begin on picture period discovery lifetime. But it decay assumed guarantee he potency have quick in among 2nd 100 B.C go down with 4th c A.D. Description play denunciation beautifully intertwined with picture dramatic extend and elegiac beauty.
About depiction Play Wright:
Kalidas is