Marula (IAST: Mārulā; fl. 13th century or earlier) was a Sanskrit-language poet from India. Her verses are included in early medieval Sanskrit anthologies, including Sharngadhara's Paddhati and Jalhana's Suktimuktavali.
Date
editMarula's verses are included in Sanskrit anthologies such as Jalhana's Suktimuktavali (13th century) and Sharngadhara's Paddhati (14th century). So, she must have lived in the 13th century or earlier, although her exact period is not certain.[1]
She must have been a famous poet of her time, for a verse attributed to Dhanadadevas in Sharngadhara's Paddhati names her among four notable women poets:[2]
Shilabhattarika, Vijja, Marula, and Morika are poetesses of renown with great poetic genius and erudition. Those who have command over all branches of learning, having participated in dialogues with other scholars and having defeated them in debates, are regarded as sound scholars and experts. Consequently, they alone are venerable in the scholarly world.
— Dhanadadevas, in Sharngadhara's Paddhati[3]
Example verses
editOnly five of Marula's verses are now extant.[1] The following verse is about a woman separated from her lover:[1]
Gopayanti viraha-janitam dukhamagre gurunam |
Hiding away your grief at separation from your beloved one, |
—Marula, quoted in Jalhana's Suktimuktavali | —Translation by J. B. Chaudhuri.[1] |
References
edit- ^ a b c d Supriya Banik Pal 2010, p. 154.
- ^ A. K. Warder 1994, p. 421.
- ^ Supriya Banik Pal 2010, p. 150.
Bibliography
edit- A. K. Warder (1994). Indian Kavya Literature. Vol. 4: The ways of originality (Bana to Damodaragupta). Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 421–. ISBN 978-81-208-0449-4.
- Supriya Banik Pal (2010). "Some Women Writers and their Works in Classical Sanskrit Literature: A Reinterpretation". In Philip F. Williams (ed.). Asian Literary Voices: From Marginal to Mainstream. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-90-8964-092-5.