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Pratibha - The Concept of Intution in the Philosophy of Abhinavagupta by Priyawat Kuanpoonpol
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Pratibha: The concept of intuition in the philosophy of
Abhinavagupta
Kuanpoonpol, Priyawat, Ph.D.
‘Harvard University, 1991
Copyright ©1991 by Kuanpoonpol, Priyawat. All rights reserved.
300. Zeeb Ra
‘Ann Arbor, MI 48106HARVARD UNIVERSITY
‘THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
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‘The undersigned, appointed by the
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Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies
Committee
have examined a thesis entitled
Pratibha: The Concept of Intuition
Yin the Philosophy of Abhinavagupta
presented by Priyawat Kuanpoonpol
candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and hereby
certify that it is worthy of acceptance.
Signature S28,
Typed name .. Michael Witzel
Typed name James, W...Benson.
sionsare . taniy Dae
Typed name Gary. Tubb
Date October. 3s..1991Pratibha : The Concept of Intuition
in the Philosophy of Abhinavagupta
A thesis presented
by
Priyawat Kuanpoonpol
The Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies
in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
in the subject of
Sanskrit and Indian Studies
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts
October 1991Copyright 1991 by Priyawat Kuanpoonpol
All rights reserved,Pratibha: The Concept of Intuition
in the Philosophy of Abhinavagupta.
An Abstract
This dissertation is a study of Abhinavagupta’s concept of intuition,
with particular attention to its role in an aesthetic experience. In this
study, the philosopher's synthesis of this concept is traced to three
traditions of his intellectual heritage. The grammarian Bhartrhari's
treatment of intuition in the Vatyapadiya provides the groundwork for
defining the creative role of language in cognition. The Saiva religious
philosophy uses the concept of intuition in forwarding the idea that a
subject is free and independent in thought, and that the subject, like God,
Siva, is a unity of consciousness. A human forms mental images out of
the spirit and will to know and act. Anandavardhana in poetics also
advances the theory of rasadhvani (“Suggestion of Sentiments") in which
the poet, possessing intuition and using suggestion in poetic language, can
devise original, mood-evoking poems. Abhinava combines these
meanings in his concept of intuition which, in the largest sense, is
consciousness's verbal immanence unfolding from a partless homogeneity
into diverse, perceptible phenomena. In Abhinava's explanation of an
aesthetic experience, the concept of intuition underlies the unity of ine
imaginative enterprise that is an aesthetic continuum comprising the
whole of the theater--the poet, actor, and audience. This unity in turn
gives the theater its peculiar aesthetic modality and coherence, beginning
with a desire to enjoy oneself and ending in the relishing of a rasa, an
aesthetic mood. Ramifications of intuition as a valid means of knowledge
are discussed in the concluding remarks. Descriptions of different aspects
of intuition are made with specific references to his intellectual sources:
Bhartrhari in language theory, Utpaladeva in the Saiva theory of
cognition, and Anandavardhana in poetics.Table of Contents
Chapter1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Bhartrhari’s Notion of Intuition in the Vakyapadiva
Bhartrhari’s notion of intuition
Sabda and vac
Intuition: prztibha
Sense-perceptions and language in cognition
Chapter 3. Intuition in the Saiva Theory of Cognition
Recognition
Samvid
Intuition and determinate cognition
Imagination and valid knowledge
Chapter 4. Intuition in Poetics
Problematics of the “soul” of poetry
Poetic communication
Conceptions of “body” and “soul”
‘Suggestion and its mode of communication
Suggested meaning and the poet's intuition
Anandavardhana's concept of intuition
24
2s
33
39
52
ed
58
73
79
95
97
104
106
120
135
140Chapter 5. The Structure of Perception in Aesthetic Experience
Bhattanayaka's view considered
Other critics’ views on the nature of a rasa
Is rasa “perceived, produced and revealed?”
The hero: "Who is Rama?”
Psychology of aesthetic experience
Sadharapikarana
Anuvyavasiya
Intuition in an aesthetic experience
Chapter 6. Discussion and Conclusion: the Creative Intuition
Samvid in the aesthetic context
Pramina
Intuition and self-knowledge
Conclusion: FratibAd and its scope
Bibliography--Primary Literature
Bibliography--Secondary Literature
148
149
157
169
178
185
192
207
214
271
277Abh
Ass
Dha
Dhal
DeMS,
HOS
FSP
IP
IPR
IPky
PV
IPVV
KA
KASS
KSS.
KSTS
aT
Ta
‘SBE
ZaRS
VSS
Bs
Abbreviations
Abhinavabharali
Aesthetic Experience According to Abhinavagupta
Aesthetic Rapture: the Raszdhyaya of the Natyasastra
Anandasrama Sanskrit Series
Bhartthari: A Study of the Vakyapadiya in the Light af
the Ancient Commentaries
Dhvanydloka
Dhvanyalokalocana
Deccan College Monograph Series
Harvard Oriental Series
History of Sanskrit Poetics
Jadian Poetics
Isvarapratyabhijiakarika
Isvarapratyabhy
Jsvarapratyably
kivyalamkira
kavyadarsa
kavyalamkarasirasamgraha
Kashmir Sanskrit Series
Kashmir Series of Texts and Studies
Natyasastra
Rifataratging
Tantratoka
Tantrasara
Sacred Books of the East
Sivadrsti
Spandakarikt
Sivasttra
Vakyapadiya
Vidyabhavan Sanskrit Series (Chowkhamba)
YogasitraChapter 1
Introduction
In the few centuries before Abhinavagupta's lifetime (late 10th to 11th
century), a number of distinguished works were composed by the scholars
and poets of Kashmir. Although Kalhapa’s history does not give us specific
accounts of their achievements, it can be inferred from works in poetics and
philosophy that partisans of various schools of thought were actively
engaged in fruitful debates. A vital affluence of the kingdom also
encouraged a high degree of intellectual intercourse, resulting in critical and
theoretical innovations that come down to us in a wealth of treatises, notably
in the areas of literature, poetics, Saiva philsophy, and grammar.! We
observe that several authors were learned not only in the confines of their
own fields, but that their interests in peripheral areas added syncretic
insights to their proper endeavors.
Abhinava was an intellectual whose many interests, far from being
fragmented, converged in a core of beliefs that formed a characteristic,
philosophical outlook. One such central view is his concept of intuition, or
1 Georg Bobler, “Detailed Report of a Tour in Search of Sanskrit Mss. Made in
Katmir, Rajputana, and Central Indis,” fourza/ of the Bombay Branch af the Royat
Asiatic Society, 1877: Bxira number (vol. 34).pratibha. \n the dissertation, | have mapped out a strategy of focusing on
Abhinava's treatment of this concept in aesthetics, drawing on his knowledge
in various disciplines to describe it in that context. By tracing the
intellectual sources that contribute to his delineation of the notion of
aesthetic intuition and by demonstrating how he shapes the structure of an
aesthetic perception, i show that the model of the aesthetic structure
depends on a general theory of cognition in Saiva religious philsophy. Since,
according to Saivism, cognition is produced by the homogeneous
consciousness in one basic way and in being produced implies a particular
relationship of the subject, object, and experience, the structure of various
kinds of experience is fundamentally the same, differing only as modalities
of consciousness.
The idea of intuition ( pratibAa ) is traditionally treated in passing in
Indian philosophy, with the exception of the Samkhya and Saikara’s
Advaitavedinta systems. Intuition, as a means of knowledge, unaided by
the input of a sensory perception and occurring through a sense-contact with
its object, is not considered valid. Intuitions of morally perfected
individuals, however, are sources of saintly, revealed knowledge
( arsajtiana ) that is the basis of scriptural authoritativeness.? The
reasoning is that such extraordinary persons, seers (s/s), exist in reality
itself and know it directly without an intermediary of the senses. Vedic
-ers and poets, for example, are said to have a special wisdom or insight
( da7) through which they receive direct knowledge from the divine. This
insight gives them an immediate knowledge of reality which they sing out in
2 Gopinath Kavirai, “The Doctrine of Pratibha in Indian Philosophy,” ABQR/ 5
(1924): part [, 1-18, part 11 113-132.the verses of Vedic hymns.3 This connection between extraordinary
cognitive and poetic powers as conceived by Vedic poets is maintained in the
Jater literary tradition which attributes a poet's genius to his pratibha. It
is the insight and inspiration capable of immortalizing human deeds in an
imperishable beauty of poetry.
Abhinava was at a historically advantageous point where a few centuries
before Utpaladeva had articulated a rigorous system of Saiva philosophy and
Anandavardhana brought out his revolutionary theory of the suggestion of
an aesthetic sentiment ( rasadévan/) in poetics. Both predecessors of
Abhinava relied substantially on Bhartrhari's theory of language and
consciousness in formulating and systematizing their theories.
In the Saiva theory of cognition, knowledge is seen to be subjectively
produced by an agent who is independent and sovereign in his mental
construction. Each thought is a fresh and new creation on the part of
3 Jan Gonda, “2A/p In the Reveds,” and “Prauibag,” chs.2 and 15 in The Vision
af the Vedie Poets (131 Indian edition, Munshiram Mancharial Publishers Pvt. Lid,
1984), pp. 68-169, 318-348,
* A clear example can be seen in Kaihapa, the author of the history of Kashmir
‘Who thinks of himself as a poet because af his truth-telling capacity. See Stein, M. A. tr.
The Rijataradgini: A Chronicle of the Kings of Keshmir, (RTR) vol. (Delhi: Motilal
Banarsidass, Repr. 1979, 1st ed. 1900), verses 1.3-5, 7, pp. 1-2.
“L.3. Worthy of praise is that power of true poets, whatever it may be, which
surpasses even the stream of nectar, in es much as by it their own bodies of glory as
‘Well 2 those of others obtain immortality. 4. Who else but poets resembling Prajapatis
lin creative powers] and able to bring forth lovely productions, can place the past times
before the eyes of men? 5. If the poet did not see in his mind's eye the existences
‘which he is to reveal to all men, what other indication would there be of his possessing
‘divine intuition | pratibAa|? 7. The noble-minded [poet] is alone worthy of praise whose
‘word, like that of a judge, Keeps free from love or hatred in relating the facts of the
past”consciousness whose intuition, tinged by ideas of empirical things, verbally
determines a cognition. In poetics, the theory of suggestion postulates that
poetic language functions in revealing such meanings that, when perceived
by a sympathetic reader, leads him/her to realize an aesthetic sentiment, ie.
a rasa. Ananda encourages the poet, who is a god-like creator in the
literary realm, to use the suggestive function of language and to exercise his
pratibhé in order to compose novel and original works. Abhinava
comments on the major works of these two predecessors. The w/marsini
and the vivrdivimarsini are commentaries to Utpala's Pratyabhiiiakarik?
and Pratyabhijaavrtti respectively, and the Zocana to Anandavardhana's
Dhvanyiloka
Abhinava’s use of the term praibAd combines cognitive and aesthetic
aspects of creativity: the subjective freedom fundamental to every cognition
is not different from imaginative and emotive powers in poetic language.
Abhinava attributes a creative intuition to the sensitive audience as well as
to the poet, and in that way he systematically defines a continuum of
aesthetic experience, ie, the theater, as an expanse of common imagination
spun out of the intuitive power of the poet and responded to by the same in
the audience. Their common bond is the language of poetry that spellbinds
the spectators to a world brought forth in the poet's imaginings.
Combining literary criticism with religious philosophy, Abhinava
conceives of the poet's intuition as the noumenous substance of the mind-
made world. The poet is like God who plays at painting the universe on the
screen that is Himself. The sympathetic spectators, exercising their
intuitions in commonly experiencing the pleasures of drama, are akin tocreatures (iva, pasu ) who reflect God's universe in their everyday
consciousnesses. Thus, in Abhinava’s poetics, theatrical unity between the
Poet, actor and audience is structured analogously to unity between God and
humans in Saiva theology.
In this comprehensive view, the concept of intuition emerges as the
innate power of consciousness that evolves from a first, noumenal moment
through stages of increasingly formed language into self-conscious thoughts
and communicable expressions. Language, in Abhinava's Saiva Tantric view,
is not merely the fabric of thought and communication, but subtle language
in the highest sphere is the world-creative material itself. Supreme
language, pari vak or pratibhd devi, is the voice that is God's mind. This
large meaning of a world-creative language is never entirely absent
whenever Abhinava speaks of knowledge in other contexts. Language is the
web of human society and the link between humans and the divine.
Ordinary language binds humans to the world and makes them cattle (p2sv )
felative to the Lord; but the supreme language, being the essential identity
‘between consciousness and Consciousness, leads a fettered beast back to the
recognition of his true, sovereign nature.
Poetic language evokes meanings deeper and more moving than literal
expressions of ordinary language. For Anandavardhana the literary theorist,
suggested meanings are the soul of poetry because they penetrate mere
conventions to arouse the sensitive audience's sympathetic feelings.
Abhinava devises a psychological theory to show how literary and dramatic
stimuli turn emotional states ( £42+a ) into aesthetic sentiments (rasa), and
how these sublime emotions repose in and are relished by the soul.In this way, Abhinava views humans as god-like in nature and power.
The human mind, even in a cattle-like state of bondage, has an independent
and sovereign power of imagination. The human condition is underlaid by a
spirited desire to know and to act. At bottom, a self-awareness of one's own
agency in knowledge and action is the wonderment ( camatkara) that
Abhinava ascribes commonly to ordinary cognitive and aesthetic
perceptions. Cematiara is the joy of perceiving the self by the self. Itis a
supreme wonder and delight in the knowledge thai ‘I’ illuminate my
thoughts; cazatkara is also the pleasure of relishing aesthetic sentiments by
the self that savors its emotive creations. Abhinava transforms the
deptorable transience of sagrséra into a world renewed at every moment.
Images in thought and action succeed one another, and everything that
comes into existence, good or evil, is real. The ordinary world of transactions
( vyavahara ) based on human conventions is real because of being
constantly useful to people. So, 100, the extraordinarily beguiling world of
poetry and drama is a reality proven by the sheer experience of enjoyment.
Bringing together these facets of the concept of intuition while focusing
on its development in the aesthetic contert, I trace the conceptual sources to
the notions of intuition in the first £éjzole of Bhartrhari's Vakyapadiva and
Utpaladeva’s treatment of cognition in the /svarapratyabhijaavimarsial, in
chapter two, “Bhartrhari’s Notion of Intuition in the Vakyapadiya.” and
chapter three, "Intuition in the Saiva Theory of Cognition,” respectively.
Bhartrhari’s theory of language is critically important for the Saiva theory of
cognition, as well as for Ananda’s theory of suggestion in poetics.
Specifically, the VP postulates that Brahman, the essence of language( Sebdetattva ), is present in the world in two ways: it is embedded
( semmnivesita ) in each individual consciousness ( pratyakcaitenya ); and it is
revealed as the Veda in the intuitions of the seers. Brahman which is one is
divided into many in the form of Speech ( vac). Similarly in a human,
Speech, called "the reflecting one," ( prafyavamarsa/) is the subjective form
of language which renders the homogeneous consciousness perceptible to
itself and others. Intuition is the juncture between consciousness and its
form of diversity. As the noumenon that unfolds into three subsequent
stages of Speech, intuition qualifies (or approximates) reality which is
Brahman on one side and becomes revealed as concrete thought and
apprehension in the diverse form of language on the other.
In chapter three, it is shown that the basic notions of consciousness and
language found in the VP are borrowed by Utpaladeva in developing his
Saiva theory of full consciousness ( semv/d). Such a consciousness
characterized by illuminating and reflecting aspects is capable of complex
thought-formation. A mental image presented in mind as an object-
cognition is consciousness's subjective creation by the cognizer (pramatr ),
who in being an agent, as the Saivas emphasize repeatedly, is independent
( svatantra ) and sovereign ( aisvara). Cognition, determined by an intuition
of what it is from what it is not, is basically verbal in nature. An object-
cognition rests on a subjective awareness, and this apperception inherent in
awarenesses is the condition of normal mental life in which the world
appears as external objects of ‘my’ consciousness. Apperception
( aauvyavasaya ), which in the Saiva philosophy denotes a mental function
capable of arranging mental events into a coherent and meaningful order, isused by Abhinava in the AbAinavabhérati to account for the theater
(adtya ) as an expanse of imaginative re-creation. The theater is re-creation.
It is like an apperception in that the spectator relishes his/her mental states
that have been aroused and colored by poetic/dramatic propriety ( eucitya )
into a sublimely pleasurable object of contemplation.
Bhartrhari’s concept of intuition, in a different way, is also a cornerstone
of Anandavardhana’s innovations in poetics. It provides the ground for
asserting that suggestive meanings are the essence of poetry, above and
beyond literal meanings. In chapter four, it is shown that Ananda's theory
of suggestion ( rasadhvan/) reorients the aesthetic attitude toward elements
that ought to be counted as causes of beauty. In contrast to his predecessors,
Knanda’s new literary criticism states that the essential poetic beauty
consists in suggested meanings that bring about an aesthetic sentiment:
through poetry a poet communicates and imparts his feelings to the
audience. Although the traditions of poetics and dramaturgy have indirectiy
presaged a notion that the poet's feelings ( £44va ) control the poem and
bring about similar feelings in the readers, Ananda forcefully redefines the
object of true poetry as states of mind ( cittavrtt/) and poetic communication
as a sympathy of hearts.
A vital question, which seems to elicit sage opinions from several
quarters in the following centuries, revolves around the nature of the rasa.
Exciting debates cited by Abhinava in devising his own explanation also
illuminate his thought processes, as he refutes while, at the same time,
extracting useful ideas from opponents’ arguments. In the course of the
argument he maintains by emphatic repetitions in the Zocaza and theAbhinavabharati that intuition ( pratibha ) is the cooperating cause of the
audience's perception of a rasa; that a rasa is perceived, produced and
revealed; that an aesthetic experience is an cbstructionless consciousness
(avighad samvit) in its relishing ( rasand, carvapa ) of the object which is a
rasa; that the theater is a re-creation ( eausirtang ), which is like an
apperception ( eruvyavasaya ), rather than an imitation ( anuéarapa ); that
human thoughts and feelings are influenced by their trace impressions; that
the wbhévid? are emotional stimuli ( uparadjaka ) and not emotional causes
( £arana), and so on. These assertions combined show a rigorously formed
structure of aesthetic perception which is described in chapter five, “The
Structure of Perception in Aesthetic Experience.”
‘While seemingly an independent and original commentator, Abhinava is
faithful to the traditions and the texts on which he comments. Even though
Anandavardhana has said nothing at all about the sensitive audience's
intuition and imagination ( pratibAa), Abhinava thinks that the great
Poetician implies that a poet's rasa is the root of poetry/drama, bearing its
fruit in a like sentiment of the audience. How does one devise an
epistemological scheme that can successfully treat such a flimsy and
ephemeral, tie? So, too, there are many problems in describing perceptions
from the perspectives of the poet, actor, character, and spectator who are
engaged in the same drama/poetry from different angles. Like Hydra’s
head, several problems arise in the place of each one that has been freshly
lopped off, for we see that theories proffered by Buddhists, Mimamsaka
ritualists, Samkhya philosophers, poeticians and dramaturgists are
thoughtfully considered and refuted for different reasons by our Saivaphilosopher.
Abhinava clearly does not want an aesthetic experience to be completely
transcendent--beyond the world--while he maintains that it is not anything
found in the workaday world. More important, in view of the Saiva religious
philosophy, nothing can be outside of the unity of consciousness which
manifests ideas and images in only one way; and in this system to be is to be
perceived. In structuring a scheme of aesthetic communication, therefore,
Abhinava naturally employs the Saiva epistemology which fortunately lends
itseif well in this regard. Its explanation of cognition as an imaginative
process already makes it adaptable to the treatment of aesthetic imagination
in poetics. In a close analogy to the Saiva universe--a unity in which human
minds reflect God's imaginings--unfolding from the noumenon of God's
Pratibha into material phenomena, the theater is a re-creation in uniting
the spectators’ imagination with the poet's designs. The poet's intuitions are
resounded by the audience's emotive experiences. The viewers contemplate
and relish imaginings which flow with the actor's dramatic portrayal but
which are shaped by beginningiess trace impressions in their own psychic
substrata.
A following point is made in the concluding chapter, “Discussion and
Conclusion: the Creative Intuition”: our medieval philosophers implicitly
believe that innovative ideas arise out of conservative traditions. Such great
iainds that form a traditional background to Abhinava’s thought are
radically original; their credence in originality is expressed in the use of the
idea of intuition. Yet these philosophers persistently argue for incalculable
values of tradition that gives life to fresh visions. The creative process neverW
means a break with the pasi; it is a spontaneous presentation formed by
unaccountable trace-impressions. Although Abhinava highly regards this
world's reality, with its achievements in the arts and scholarship, his concept
of intuition falls back ultimately in support of traditional ideals of morality
and liberation. Thus, in his view, human intuitions realized outwardly as
phenomena in the world inwardly illuminate the nature of self which, Indian
philosophers say, ought to be seen and heard.Chapter 2
Bhartrhari’s notion of intuition in the Vatyapadiya
In different philosophical systems intuition ( pratbhd ) occupies a
peculiar place among the valid means of knowledge. It is generally
considered a perception which arises without the benefit of direct sensory
experience and therefore not a reliable source of valid knowledge. Some,
however, consider it the highest kind of revelatory knowledge that is the
basis of scriptural and testimonial wisdom which cannot be gained from an.
ordinary, rational, experience. Abhinavagupta's use of the term indicates its
presence in all human knowledges and experiences of ordinary cognitive,
aesthetic, and religious nature.
That the concept of intuition occupies a central place in Abhinava's
Philosophy directly results from his interests in several branches of learning.
Particularly in aesthetics, the notion of intuition is formulated by using the
Saiva theory of knowledge to furnish a more rigorous explanation for
Anandavardhana’s seminal ideas concerning the communication between a
Poet and his audience. In this communication, a rasa, an aesthetic
sentiment, is the primary object of communication. In order to fully
appreciate Abhinava's ramifications of this term, we will examine the
‘sources of his conception in the Saiva theory of knowledge and in the
Janguage theory of Bhartrhari, both of which make profound contributions to13
Abhinava’s insights in the field of poetics and dramaturgy.
In Abhinavagupta's lifetime, the society of Kashmir hung in a balance
between its splendid culture and political turmoil. The arts and scholarship
flourished amidst the rapidly changing fortunes of rulers and ministers who
were faced with factional wars within and the impending Muslim invasion
without. For a populace that highty valued the pleasures of life, and a
society in which dharma was challenged by the behavior of kings and
commoners alike,* Abhinava views poetry and drama as a means to
accomplish the four aims of life. All sastric texts are assumed to promote
these aims, and poetry is inherently valuable in this regard.” In the first
chapter of the AbAiaavabhdrat? Abhinava argues that the Natyasdsira is a
5 For Abhinava’s historical background see KC Pandey, AdAissvagupia: Ao
Historkeal and Philosophical Study, Chowkhamba Sanskrit Studies, vol. 1 (24 ed. rev. and
enlarged, Varanasi: Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series Office, 1963). For a history of Kashmir see
Kalbape’s Rajataredgini : A Chronicle of che Kings of Kasai, Vol.1, M.A. Stein, tc. (Repr.
Dethi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1979). Kalhapa mentions brieffy the Muslim enchroachment (27°
7-70), led by Mahmud of Ghazni. See also Stein's introduction, pp. 106-108.
5 iSomananda's remark in S/vadrst/1.37-8, and Utpala’s comment could be taken
as an oblique social comment, we have this passage: ".a/visin/ Seriria/ grhpal
peremesvarah! yathi arpab sirvabhaumaeh prabbavacodsbbavital // kriden karo
pHditadbarmins teddbarmadearmateh /tstbi prabub premodiimd kridety eva thE
‘athi” “The Supreme Lord takes on the bodies, which are inhabitants [in the depth of the
ocean of helll, Just as a sovereign king of the realm, overjoyed by his power, sports at
making the dharmes af commoners his own dharmas, just $0, the Lord, whose essence is joy,
plays similarly thus” Utpala's comment says, “He illustrates this very idea by a worldly
example.” Redheshyam Caturvedi, ed, r. Zhe Sivadrst af Sri Soménendentiba with the
vrtti of Sri Uipaladeva. (Benates: Varanaseye Sanskrit Sensthan, 1986.) p.25. Kathana
‘also teports with disapproval the behavior of kings who broke caste-rules and romped
around with washermen and washerwomen. See 27; n. 1 above.
7 Gary A. Tubb, “Sintarasa in Mahibhirata.” Journal af South Asia Literature, 1X
(Winter/Spring 1985), pp. 141-68. Reprinted in Arvind Sharma, ed., [Link] the
Mebibhérate, (Leiden: EJ Brill, 1991), pp. 171-203.