LITERARY PROSE: ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL
Literary prose in Kannada can be traced back
to one thousand and five hundred years and inscriptions form the basis for this
conclusion. Of course, early inscriptions of Kannada contain a fair share of Sanskrit
vocabulary and many of them are written in stanzaic pattern. But some inscriptions
are in prose and they contain occasional glimpses of literary merits. This is restricted
to the use of figures of speech and very rarely the narration itself poignant. An
inscription from
Shravanabelagola, where in a Jaina saint compares the transitory nature of human
possessions to a rainbow, morning mist and lightning, is a classic example. Another
inscription from Athakur
in which a loving master erects a memorial for his pet dog which sacrifices its
life in a hunt is another touching narrative. Memorial stones praising the sacrifice
of a ‘sati’ or the valor of a soldier are some times inscribed in fine literary
prose.
The
Champu tradition was a combination of prose and poetry and great poets such
as
Gradually we move on to the twelfth century and medieval Kannada comes to the forefront at this juncture. Vachanakaras like Basavanna composed poems which were heirs to all the qualities that good prose can boast of. They did not cling to strict rules of prosody. Many Vachanas may be recited as dramatic prose. The syntactic and morphological forms that were selected by them were very close to the spoken version of Kannada.
Harihara indulged
in an interesting experiment in two of his major ‘Ragales’ namely ‘Nambiyannana
ragale’ and ‘Basavarajadevara ragale’. The chapters in these Works alternate between
prose and poetry. This practice of writing entire chapters in prose makes Harihara
one of the master prose writers of Kannada. He found ways of creating situational
humour, rage, pathos and simple descriptions of things all in captivating prose.
Later poets such
as Kumaravyasa, Purandaradasa, Lakshmeesha and Chamarasa have made use of the salient
features of good prose within the confines of prosodic stipulations. Many a time
they have made better use of prose than works written entirely in prose. Many philosophical
treatises by writers such as Nijaguna Shivayogi, Maggeya Mayideva and others are
composed in prose. A special mention must be made of Muddana who declares that he
prefers prose to poetry.
(¥ÀzÀåA ªÀzsÀåA, UÀzÀåA ºÀÈzÀåA) ‘Ramashvamedham’
and ‘Adbhuta Ramayanam’ are his prose works.
Of course many
knowledge based works have used prose for a proper explication of tenets written
in the form of poems. They are usually designated as ‘Vrutti’ and ‘Teeku’.
Some important
prose works written in Kannada during the pre modern era are enumerated below.
1.
‘Vaddaradhane’,
Shivakotyacharya, 10th century
2.
‘Chavundarayapurana’,
Chavundaraya, 978 A.D.
3.
‘Purvapurana’,
Hastimallishenacharya, 1300 A.D.
4.
Bhairaveshvarakathamanisutraratnakara’,
Shantalingadeshika,
1672 A.D.
5.
‘’Chikadevaraya
Vamshavali’, Tirumalarya, 1700 A.D.
6.
‘Mudramanjusha’,
Kempunarayana (Narayana Sharma), 1843.
7.
Chikadevaraja
Binnapa’, Chikadevaraja, 17th Century
8.
Sougandhikaparinaya,
Mummadi Krishnaraja, 1850 A.D.
9.
‘Tulakaveri
Mahatmyam’, Cheluvmabaa, 18th Century
10.
‘Rajavali Kathasara’,
Devachandra, 1840 A.D.
11.
Batteesaputthali
Kathe, Multiple authors,
12.
Karnatakada
Kaifiyattugalu