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Sundara Kānda: Hanuman's Odyssey

Whereas Mahabharata's Bhagvad-Gita is taken as a philosophical guide, Ramayana's Sundara Kãnda is sought for spiritual solace; many believe that reading it or hearing it recited would remove all hurdles and usher in good tidings! Miracles apart, it's in the nature of this great epic to inculcate fortitude and generate hope in man for it’s a depiction of how Hanuman goes about his errand against all odds. Besides, it portrays how Seetha, on the verge of self-immolation, overcomes despair to see life in a new light? With rhythm of its verse and the flow of the narrative this sloka to sloka transcreation of the canto beautiful of Valmiki's adi kavya - the foremost poetical composition in the world, Hanuman's Odyssey that paves the way for Rama to rescue his kidnapped wife is bound to charm the readers and listeners alike. Interestingly, as the following verse illustrates, this epic was the forerunner of the magic realism of our times – “Gripped she then him by shadow / Cast which Hanuman coast to coast, Recalled he in dismay then / What Sugreev said at outset / That one fiend had aptitude / To grip its prey by mere shadow.” On a personal note, my paternal grandfather, Bulusu Thimmaiah-garu, like many in his time, was a life-long practitioner of Sundara Kãnda parayana (the epic’s daily recital in part or full), whose spirituality could have providentially guided me in this, rather an effortless, trans-creative endeavour.

BS_Murthy · Fantasy
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70 Chs

Cause of Loss

Seeing Hanuman unshaken

Smitten was Ravan by doubts then.

Wondered Ravan if bull god

Cursed him when he shook Kailash

Came in disguise to harm thus.

Or could he be that Banasur

Came in form of this vanar?

Clueless as was Ravan then

Prahastha he then addressed thus:

Wish I Prahastha thee find out

Wherefore came this simian fiend,

What was at his back of mind

Spoiled when he our garden?

Trespass why did he Lanka

Made him what to give us fight?

Assured Prahastha then vanar

Harm him none would in Lanka.

Promised he then safe passage

To trespasser there thus lay trapped.

Have thou come to spy on us

Sent by gods from heaven itself?

Clear it's all from thy valour

That thou art no mean vanar.

Mince no words 'n bare the truth

That we could thee free forthwith.

If thou try to sidetrack us

Know that will be at thy risk.

Hanuman in turn told Ravan

That his trip had none to do

With the gods that Lankans scorned.

Am I from the vanar ranks

Came to see thee king Ravan.

Spoiled I know thy garden

That thy guards would usher me

To thy court O Lankan king.

Came as thy guards to kill me

Slain them just to save my life.

Stunned as Indrajit me then

With the aid of Brahmastra

Blessed as I was by Brahma

Came I soon out of its spell.

On my own I came to thee

None as ever would contain me.

Know me as the one sent by

Rama to make truce with thee.