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MODERN PLAYS: OLD BEAST STORIES. 127

drama was one of the first branches of Hindu secular literature and which accepted the spoken dialects; and the native theatre modern. forms the best, indeed the only, school in which an Englishman can acquaint himself with the in-door life of the people.

dramatic

revival.

In our own day there has been a great dramatic revival Recent in India: new plays in the vernacular tongues issue rapidly from the press; and societies of patriotic young natives form themselves into dramatic companies, especially in Calcutta and Bombay. Many of the pieces are vernacular renderings of stories from the Sanskrit epics and classical dramas. Several have a political significance, and deal with the phases. of development upon which India has entered under the influence of British rule. One Bengáli play, the Nil-darpan,1 or the Indigo Factory,' became the subject of a celebrated trial in Calcutta ; while others—such as Ekei ki bale Sabhyatá? 'Is this what you call civilisation?'-suggests many serious thoughts to a candid English mind. In 1877, 102 dramas were published in India in the native tongues; and in 1882, 245.

novel.

Closely allied to the drama is the prose romance. In 1823, The Dr. H. H. Wilson intimated that Hindu literature contained Hindu collections of domestic narrative to an extent surpassing those of any other people. The vast growth of European fiction since that date renders this statement no longer accurate. But Wilson's translations from the Vrihat-kathá may still be read with interest, and the Sanskrit Beast-stories now occupy an Beasteven more significant place in the history of Indo-European stories; literature than they did then. Many fables of animals familiar to the western world, from the time of Æsop downwards, had their original home in India. The relation between the fox and the lion in the Greek versions has no reality in nature. It was based, however, upon the actual relation between the lion and his follower the jackal, in the Sanskrit stories.3 Weber thinks that complete cycles of Indian fables may have existed in the time of Panini (350 B.C.). It is known that the Sanskrit Panchatantra, or Book of Beast Tales, was translated into the ancient their Persian as early as the 6th century A.D., and from that render- spread ing all the subsequent versions in Asia Minor and Europe have wards. been derived. The most ancient animal fables of India are at

1 Literally, 'The Mirror of Indigo.'

2 Oriental Quarterly Magazine, Calcutta, March 1824, pp. 63-77. Also vol. iii. of Wilson's Collected Works, pp. 156–268. London, 1864.

3 See, however, Weber's elaborate footnote, No. 221, for the other view, Hist. Ind. Lit., p. 211. Max Müller's charming essay on the Migration of Fables (Chips, vol. iv. pp. 145-209, 1875) traces the actual stages of a well-known story from the East to the West.

west

Sanskrit lyric poetry.

The
Puránas,

8th to 16th
century
A. D.

Contents of the Puránas.

Their

sects.

the present day the nursery stories of England and America The graceful Hindu imagination delighted also in fairy tales; and the Sanskrit compositions of this class are the original source of many of the fairy tales of Persia, Arabia, and Christendom. The works of fiction published in the native languages in India in 1877 numbered 196; and in 1882, 237

In medieval India, a large body of poetry, half-religious, halfamorous, grew up around the legend of the youthful Krishna (the eighth incarnation of Vishnu) and his loves with the shepherdesses, the playmates of his sweet pastoral life. Kálidása, according to Hindu tradition, was the father of the crotic lyric, as well as a great dramatic and epic poet. In his Megha-dúta or 'Cloud Messenger,' an exile sends a message by a wind-borne cloud to his love, and the countries beneath its long aerial route are made to pass like a panorama before the reader's eye. The Gita Govinda, or Divine Herdsman of Jayadeva, is a Sanskrit 'Song of Solomon' of the 12th century A.D. A festival once a year celebrates the birthplace of this mystical love-poet, in the Birbhum District of Lower Bengal; and many less famous compositions of the same class now issue from the vernacular press throughout India. In 1877, no fewer than 697 works of poetry were published in the native languages in India; and in 1882, 834.

The medieval Bráhmans displayed a marvellous activity in theological as well as in lyric poetry. The Puránas, literally 'The Ancient Writings,' form a collection of religious and philosophical treatises in verse, of which the principal ones number eighteen. The whole Puránas are said to contain 1,600,000 lines. The really old ones have either been lost or been incorporated in new compilations; and the composition of the existing Puránas probably took place from the 8th to the 16th century A.D. As the epics sang the wars of the Aryan heroes, so the Puránas recount the deeds of the Brahman gods. They deal with the creation of the universe; its successive dissolutions and reconstructions; the stories of the deities and their incarnations; the reigns of the divine Manus; and the chronicles of the Solar and Lunar lines of kings who ruled, the former in the east and the latter in the west of the Middle Land (Madhya-desha).

The Puránas belong to the period after the mass of the people had split up into their two existing divisions, as wor shippers of Vishnu or of Siva, post, 700 A.D. They are

INDIAN LITERARY ACTIVITY, 1882. 129

devoted to the glorification of one or other of these two rival gods, and thus embody the sectarian theology of Bráhmanism. While claiming to be founded on Vedic inspira- Their tion, they practically superseded the Veda, and have formed influence. during ten centuries the sacred literature on which Hinduism rests.1

An idea of the literary activity of the Indian mind at the Indian present day may be formed from the fact, that 4890 works were works published published in India in 1877, of which 4346 were in the native in 1877 languages. Only 436 were translations, the remaining 4454 being original works or new editions. The number of Indian publications constantly increases. In 1882, 6198 works were and 1882. published in India, 5543 being in the native languages. The translations numbered 720, and the original works, including new editions, 5478. These figures only show the publications officially registered under the Act. A large number of unregistered pamphlets or brochures must be added; together with the daily and weekly issue of vernacular newspapers, exceeding 230 in number and circulating over 150,000 copies.

Regarding their

This chapter has attempted to trace the intellectual and Absence of religious development of the early Aryans in India, and their territorial history. constitution into castes and communities. territorial history, it has said almost nothing. It has, indeed, indicated their primeval line of march from their Holy Land among the seven rivers of the Punjab, to their Land of the Sacred Singers between the upper courses of the Jumna and the Ganges; and thence to their more extensive settlements in the Middle Land of Bengal (Madhya-desha) stretching to beyond the junction of these two great rivers. It has also told very briefly the legend of their advance into Southern India, in the epic rendering of the Rámáyana. But the foregoing pages have refrained from attempts to fix the dates or to fill in the

1 The foregoing pages have very briefly reviewed the most important branches of Sanskrit literature; the influence of that literature upon Hinduism will be dealt with in a subsequent chapter. To fully appreciate the connection between ancient thought and present practice in India, the student may also refer to Professor Monier Williams' Modern India and the Indians (Trübner, 1879). That work unites the keen observation of a traveller new to the country with the previous learning acquired during a lifetime devoted to Oriental studies. Professor Monier Williams is thus enabled to correlate the existing phenomena of Indian life with the historical types which underlie them.

VOL. VI.

I

Its induc

details of these movements.

For the territorial extension of

the Aryans in India is still a battle-ground of inductive history. Even for a much later period of Indian civilisation, the tive data. data continue under keen dispute. This will be amply apparent in the following chapters. These chapters will open with the great upheaval of Buddhism against Bráhmanism in the 6th century before Christ. They will summarize the struggles of the Asiatic races in India during a period of twenty-three hundred years. They will close with the great military revival of Hinduism under the Maráthá Bráhmans in the 18th century of our era. An attempt will then be made, from the evidence of the vernacular literature and languages, to present a view of Indian thought and culture, when the European nations came in force upon the scene.

The Bráhmans in Indian history.

The six

attacks on

Meanwhile, the history of India, so far as obscurely known to us before the advent of the Greeks, 327 B.C., is essentially a literary history, and the memorials of its civilisations are mainly literary or religious memorials. The more practical aspects of those long ages, which were their real aspects to the people, found no annalist. From the commencement of the post-Vedic period, the Bráhmans strove with increasing success to bring the Aryan life and civilisation of India more and more into accord with their own priestly ideas.

In order to understand the long domination of the Brahmans, and the influence which they still wield, it is necessary also to keep in mind their position as the great literary caste. Their priestly supremacy has been repeatedly assailed, and was during a space of nearly a thousand years overpowered by Buddhism. But throughout twenty-two centuries the Bráhmans have been the counsellors of Hindu princes and the teachers of the Hindu ism, 6th people. They still represent the early Aryan civilisation of India. Indeed, the essential history of India is a narrative of the attacks upon the continuity of their civilisation,—that is to say, of attacks upon the Bráhmanical system of the Middle Land, and of the modifications and compromises to which that system has had to submit.

Bráhman

century

B.C. to

19th century A.D.

Namely, on Buddhism, the Greeks in India, the Scythic Inroads, the Rise of Hinduism, Early Muhammadan Rulers, the Mughal Empire, and the Maráthá Power. We still await the complete evidence of coins and inscriptions; although valuable materials have been already obtained from these silent memorials of the past. Mr. K. T. Telang's Introduction to the Mudrárákshasa, with Appendix, shows what can be gathered from a minute and critical examination of the historical data incidentally contained in the Hindu drama.

SIX SOLVENTS OF BRAHMANISM.

131

Those attacks mark out six epochs. First, the religious up- 1. Buddhrising of the non-Aryan and the partially Bráhmanized Aryan ism. tribes on the east of the Middle Land of Bengal; initiated by the preaching of Buddha in the 6th century B.C., culminating in the Buddhist kingdoms about the commencement of our era, and melting into modern Hinduism about the 8th century A.D. Second, warlike inroads of non-Bráhmanical Aryans and Scythic 2. Greeks, races from the west; strongly exemplified by the Greek invasions and in the 4th century B.C., and continuing under the Greco-Bactrian empire and its Scythic rivals to probably the 5th century A.D. Third, the influence of the so-called aborigines or non-Aryan 3. Nontribes of India and of the non-Aryan low-castes incorporated Aryan into the Hindu community; an influence ever at work—indeed by far the most powerful agent in dissolving Bráhmanism into Hinduism, and specially active after the decline of Buddhism about the 7th century A.D.

Scythians

tribes.

Fourth, the reaction against the low beliefs, priestly oppres- 4. Hindu sion, and bloody rites which resulted from this compromise sects. between Brahmanism and aboriginal worship. The reaction received an impetus from the preaching of Sankar Acharya, who founded his great Sivaite sect in the 8th century A.D. It obtained its full development under a line of ardent Vishnuite reformers from the 12th to the 16th centuries A.D. The fifth solvent of the ancient Bráhmanical civilisation of India was found in the Muhammadan invasions and the rule madans.

5. Muham

of Islám, 1000 to 1765 A.D. The sixth, in the English 6. English. supremacy, and in the popular upheaval which it has produced

in the 18th and 19th centuries. Each of these six epochs will, so far as space permits, receive separate treatment in the following chapters.

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