Sanskrit
Sanskrit is a remote
cousin of all the language of Europe ecepting the Finnish, Hungarian, Turkish
and basqe. Around 2000 B.C. an ancestral group of dialects arose among the
tribesmen of South Russia.
With Panini (probably
4th century B.C.) the Sanskrit language reached its classical form. It
developed a little thense forward except in its vocabulary. The grammer of
Panini, Asthadhyayi, pre-supposes the work of may earlier grammarians. Latter
grammars are mostly commentaries on Panini, the chief being Mahabashya by
Patanjali (second century B.C.) and the Banaras-commentary of Jayaditya and
Vamana (seventh century A.D.).
It was from the time
of Panini onwards that the language began to be called Samskarta, perfected or
refined, as opposed to Prakras (natural), the popular dialects which had grown
over time. In all probability, Panini bsed his work on the languages as it was
spoken in the north west. Beginning as the lingua franca of the priestly class,
it gradually became that of the governing class also. The first important
dynasty to use Sanskrit was that of the Sakas of Ujjain and the inscriptions of
Rudraman at Girnar. Otherwise, the Maurya and the other important dynasty till
the Guptas used Prakrit for their official pronouncements.
The Language of the
Rig Veda was already archaic when the hymns were composed and the ordinary
Aryan spoke a sompler tongue, moer closely akin to classical Sanskrit. By the
time of the Buddha themasses were speaking languages which were much simpler
than Sanskrit. These were the prakrits. The ordinary speech of Ancient India
has been preserved forus largely throughthe unorthodox religions. Most
inscriptions of pre-Gupta time are in Prakrit. The women and humbler characters
of the Sanskrit drama are made to speak in formalized prakrit of various
dialects. A few of secular literary works were composed in Prakrit.
Classical Sanksrit
increasing became thelanguage of brahmins and the learned few. Its use was
restricted to certainoccasions such as issuing of proclamations and during the
performance of Vedic ceremonies. In the towns and villages a popular form of
Sanksrit, known as Prakrit, came into the existence. There were a breat number
of local variations. The chief western variety was called Shuraseni and the
eastern variety, Magadhi, Pali was another popular language based on Sanksrit.
It, too, was used in the same religions as Prakrit. The Buddha, to reach more
people, taught in Magadhi.
Speaking of
literature, the four Vedas and the Brahmins and Upnishadas have some literary
qualities. Some hymns of the Rig Veda and some parts of the early Upnishadas
have some merit. Otherwise, they are mostly dry and monotonous.
In the 1028 hymns of
the Rig Veda there is a great variety of styled and merit. The hymns contain
many repetitions and the majority of them have the sameness of outlook. A
number of hymns show deployment feeling for nature, as for example, the hymns
to Ushas. A few vedic hymns are primarily secular, as for example the
Gamester's Lament.
Very tittle of
liverary quality is there in the later Vedic literature the Atherva veda mostly
a monotonous collection contains a few poems of great merit. The prose
Brahmanas, though written in simple and straight forward language have little
literary merit.
Thus the earliest Indian
literature is to be found in the Mahabharata and the Ramayana. The Mahabharata
consisting of 90,00 stanzas, is probably the longest single poem in the world's
literature. Ignoring the interpolations, the style of the Mahabharata is direct
and vivid though consisting of repeated clinches and stock epithets, typical of
epic literature every where. The chief characters are delineated in a very
simple outline but with an individuality which makes them real persons.
The other epic
Ramayana also contains interpolations but they are much briefer and are mostly
didactic. The main body of the poem gives the impression of being the work of
one author whose style was based on that of the other epic to show some kinship
to that of classical Sanskrit poetry. The style of the Ramayana is less rugged
than that of the Mahabharata. It is a work of greater art and it contains many
dramatic passages and beautiful descriptive writing.
The earliect surviving
Sanskrit poetry is that of the Buddhist writer Ashvaghosa who probably lived in
the Ist century A.D. He composed the Buddha-Charitra in a comparatively simple
classical style. The Girnar inscription of Rudradaman, dated 150 A.D. is the
earliest surviving example of Sanskrit prose.
The earliest surviving
prose stories are a few narrative episodes in the Brahmanas followed by the
pali Jatakas. It was in the Gupta period that ornate Sanskrit prose was
developed. The chief writers in this style were Dandin, Subandhu and Bana.
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