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Hamsa Sandesha

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Hamsa-Sandesha

Hamsa-Sandesha (Sanskrit: हंससन्देश; IAST: Haṃsasandeśa) or "The message of the Swan" is a Sanskrit love poem written by Vedanta Desika in the 13th century AD. A short lyric poem of 110 verses, it describes how Rama, hero of the Ramayana epic, sends a message via a swan to his beloved wife, Sita, who has been abducted by the demon king Ravana. The poem belongs to the sandeśa kāvya, ‘messenger poem’, genre and is very closely modeled upon the Meghaduta of Kalidasa. It has particular significance for Srivaishnavites, whose god, Vishnu, it celebrates.

Contents

The poet

Vedanta Desika (IAST:Vedānta Deśika) is best known as an important acarya in the Srivaishnavite tradition of South India which promulgated the philosophical theory of Viśiṣṭādvaita. He was a prolific writer in both Tamil and Sanskrit, composing over 100 philosophical, devotional and literary works; the Hamsa-Sandesha is his only work of this kind.

Vedanta Desika was born in 1269 AD. One popular story about his birth and childhood runs as follows: His devout parents were childless. One day they were visited in two separate but simultaneous dreams in which they were instructed to go to Tirupati, an important pilgrimage spot in south India, where they would be given a son. Once there, his mother had another dream in which she gave birth to Venkatesha’s (the god of Tirupati) ghaṇṭa (bell). The next day the temple bell was missing and the chief priest, who had also had a visitation, celebrated the imminent birth of a child sent by the lord. Twelve years later, Veṇkaṭeśa was born, the ghaṇṭa-avatāra (incarnation of the bell) who later became best known as Vedanta Desika (an honorific which literally means “guide for the Vedanta”). A talented child, he amazed the senior priests at the age of five and proclaimed that he had learnt all there was to know by 20.

Vedanta Desika was the chief acarya of Kanchi (now Kanchipuram in Tamil Nadu), the centre of the northern Srivaishnavite community, but later went to live in Srirangam (a town near Madurai in southern Tamil Nadu), the centre of the southern Srivaishnavites. He died at Srirangam in 1370, having returned to the city after its re-capture by Hindus following a Muslim sack. Vedanta Desika's intent of writing such a poem was to attract Sanskrit Literature fans and purists towards the SriVaishnava Philosophy by using this poem as a medium of introducing Srivaishnava concepts in the poem.

Structure of the text

The poem is divided into two clear parts, in line with Kalidasa’s Meghaduta. The first half, of 60 stanzas, describes how Rama sights and engages the swan as his messenger, and then describes to the swan the route he should take and the many places – primarily holy spots - he ought to stop on the way. The second part begins in Lanka where the poet introduces us to the ashoka grove where Sita is being held, the śiṃṣūpa tree beneath which she sits, and finally Sita herself in a string of verses. The actual message to Sita consists of only 16 verses, after which Rama dismisses the swan and the narrator completes the story of the Ramayana. The poem ends with an autobiographical note by the poet.

Hamsa

The messenger in this poem is referred to as a ‘ rājahaṃsa’ (‘royal haṃsa’). According to Monier-Williams, a haṃsa is a “goose, gander, swan, flamingo, or other aquatic bird” and he notes that it can refer to a poetical or mythical bird. Although popularly thought of as a swan, particularly in modern India, ornithologists have noted that swans do not, and never have, existed in the Indian avifauna, and Western translations tend to plump for ‘goose’, or ‘flamingo’; ‘crane’ is also a possibility.

Genre

The saṃdeśa kāvya ('messenger poem') genre is one of the best defined in Indian literature. There are about 55 messenger poems in Sanskrit, plus others written in vernacular tongues. These span India chronologically, topographically and ideologically: there are Muslim and Christian messenger poems, and poets are still composing these poems today. Each follows Kalidasa’s Meghaduta to a greater or lesser extent. They involve two separated lovers, one of who sends the other a message, and thus are designed to evoke the śṛṅgāra rasa ('feeling of love'). And they adhere to a bipartite structure in which the first half charts the journey the messenger is to follow, while the second describes the messenger’s destination, the recipient and the message itself.

Metre

The metre used in Hamsa-Sandesha is the slow mandākrāntā (‘slowly advancing’) metre which is thought to be suitable for the love-in-separation theme. The specifications of this metre are encapsulated in the following line (which is itself set to the mandākrāntā rhythm):

mandākrāntā jaladhi-ṣaḍ-agaur-mbhau natau tād-gurū cet.

The line means, by way of several technical terms, that the mandākrāntā metre has a natural break after the first four syllables and then after the next six, with the last seven syllables as one group. It is further defined as containing several different gaṇas, i.e., poetical feet consisting of predefined combination of guru and laghu – long and short - syllables. When each line is scanned it looks like,

(- - - ) ( - | u u ) ( u u u ) ( - | - u) ( - - u) ( - ) ( - )

with the vertical bars representing the natural pauses and the brackets the predefined feet. Each verse has four such quarters.

Commentaries

Commentaries include one by Agyatkartrik.

Views and criticism

The Hamsa-Sandesha was written during the medieval literary resurgence, long after the classical heyday of Sanskrit literature, and falls into the category of post-1000 AD regional Sanskrit literature. Such literature tended to enjoy less national recognition than its predecessors and in modern India literary works of this type are all but forgotten. The Hamsa-Sandesha too has slipped into obscurity for all but Srivaishnavites.

What criticism and discussion there is tends to focus either on the Hamsa-Sandesha in the shadow of the Meghaduta, or on its religious and philosophical significance. Modern Western scholarship on the poem and its author includes books and articles by Stephen P Hopkins, and by Yigal Bronner and David Shulman.

References

Hamsa-Sandesha Wikipedia