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A. K.

RAMANUJAN

A. K. Ramanujan (1929-1993) is better known as a poet in English and Kannada, and a translator from
Kannada and Tamil, than as an anthropologist, linguist and critic. His more important literary criticism
has come to us through his memorable prefaces and afterwords to his remarkably well wrought
translations. Before going to Chicago in 1963, Ramanujan taught English at Belgaum and Baroda. He was
Professor of Dravidian Linguistics at Chicago, when he died in July 1993. The commentary on
Tolkappiyam included here is culled from his introduction to translations from Tamil, Poems of Love and
War (Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1985, pp. 235-68).
It is marked by a rare lucidity and understanding of the subject. It is also included to indicate
the significance of Tolkappiyam in the theoretical canon of Indian literature, and to disabuse the student
of the commonly held idea that Sanskrit poetics was all that there was in ancient India.
Indian literary criticism is a story woven through many languages, and the Tamil strand in it is
of as much importance as the Sanskrit one, since Tamil is the mother of three other literary languages:
Kannada, Telugu and Malayalam. Hence Tolkappiyam has a special place in the history of Indian literary
theory. Ramanujan's commentary on it has done great service to the cause of modern interpretation of
ancient Tamil poetics.

On Ancient Tamil Poetics

Akam and Puram

Akam and puram are ancient, complex words. To understand them is to enter Tamil poetics, and much
that is crucial to Tamil culture. According to A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary, they are also current in
all the South Dravidian languages and in Telugu and Tulu. In classical poetry, as we have seen, akam
poems are love poems; puram are all other kinds of poems, usually about war, values, community; it is
the 'public' poetry of the ancient Tamils, celebrating the ferocity and glory of kings, lamenting the death
of heroes, the poverty of poets. Elegies, panegyrics, invectives, poems on wars and tragic events are
puram poems.
The Tolkappiyam distinguishes akam and puram as follows:
In (the five phases of) akam, no names of persons should be mentioned. Particular names are
appropriate only in puram poetry. (Tol. 57)
The dramatis personae for akam are types, such as men and women in love, foster-mothers,
girl friends, etc., rather than historical persons. Similarly, landscapes are more important than particular
places. The reason for such absence of individuals is implicit in the word akam: the 'interior' world is
archetypal, it has no history, and no names of persons and places, except, now and then, in its
metaphors. Love in all its variety (with important exceptions) - love in separation and in union, before
and after marriage, in chastity and in betrayal - is the theme of akam.

There are seven types of love, of which the first is kaikkilai or unrequited love, and the last is
peruntinai or mismatched love. (Tol. 1)

Peruntinai, or the 'major type' (as the Tolkappiyam somewhat cynically calls it), of man-woman
relationship is the forced loveless relationship: a man and a woman, mismatched in age, coming
together for duty, convenience, or lust. At the other extreme is kaikkilai (literally, the 'base
relationship'), the one-sided affair, unrequited love, or desire inflicted on an immature girl who does not
understand it. Neither of these extremes is the proper subject of akam poetry. They are common,
abnormal, undignified, fit only for servants.

Servants and workmen are outside the five akam types (of true love), for they do not have the
necessary strength of character. (Tol. 25-26)

Most of the akam anthologies contain no poems of unrequited or mismatched love; only
Kalittokai (e.g., "The Hunchback and the Dwarf", discussed below) has examples of both types. They
follow none of the formal constraints on theme and structure that are characteristics of the akam
poems.

Of the seven types, only the middle five are the subject of true love poetry. The hero and
heroine should be "well-matched in ten points" such as beauty, wealth, age, virtue, rank, etc. Only such
a pair is capable of the range of love: union and separation, anxiety, patience, betrayal, forgiveness. The
couple must be cultured; for the uncultured will be rash, ignorant, self-centred, and therefore unfit for
akam poetry.

The Five Landscapes

The Tolkappiyam opens its outline of akam poetics with a statement about the world of the
poems:

When we examine the materials of a poem, only three things appear to be important: mutal
(the "first things", i.e., time and place), karu (the "native elements"), and uri(the "human feelings"
appropriately set in mutal and karu). (Tol. 3)

"Place" is first divided into four kinds of regions, which are constituted by combinations of the
five elements, earth, water, air, fire, sky (or space). Each region is presided over by a deity and named
after a characteristic flower or tree:

mullai, a variety of jasmine, represents the forests overseen by Mayon, "the Dark One", the
dark-bodied god of herdsmen (Visnu);

kurinci, a mountain flower, stands for the mountains overseen by Ceyon, "the Red One",
Murukan, the red-speared god of war, youth and beauty;

marutam, a tree with red flowers growing near the water, for the pastoral region overseen by
Ventan, "King", identified with the rain god (Indra);

neytal, a water flower, for the sandy seashore overseen by Varunan, the wind god. (Tol. 5)

A rather special fifth region, palai or desert waste, is overseen by Korravai, a demonic goddess
of war, according to later writers. Palai is supposedly a green desert tree that is unaffected by drought.
Palai has no specific location, for it is thought that any mountain or forest may be parched to a
wasteland in the heat of summer.(3)

Time is divided into day, month and year. The year is divided into six "large time units", the six
seasons: the rains (August-September), the cool season (October-November), the season of evening
dew (December-January) the season of morning dew (February-March), early summer (April-May), and
late summer (June-July). The day is divided into five "small time units": morning, midday, evening,
nightfall, the dead of night. Some would add a sixth, dawn.

Particular "large time units" and "small time units" are associated by convention with
particular regions.

Mullai country is associated with the rainy season and evening;

kurinci, with the season of evening dew and midnight;

marutam, with the later part of night and the dawn;

neytal with the twilight or evening;

palai with summer, the season of morning dew, and midday. (Tol. 6-12)

Each of the five regions or landscapes is associated further with an appropriate uri or phase of
love. (The phases of war are discussed below.)

Lovers' union is associated with kurinci, the mountain; separation with palai, the desert;

patient waiting, with mullai, the forests;

anxious waiting, with neytal, the seashore;

the lover's infidelity and the beloved's resentment, with

marutam, the cultivated agricultural region or lowland. (Tol. 16)

Of these five, the first is clandestine (kalavu), before marriage; the fifth occurs after marriage.
The other three could be either before or after marriage. Palai, separation, includes not only the
hardships of the lover away from his love, his search for wealth, fame, and learning, but also the
elopement of the couple, their hardships on the way, and their separation from their parents.

We may note a few features of the native categories of the Tamil system. First things (time
and place) and native elements are distinguished from uri (appropriate human feelings and experience);
the systematic symbology depends on the association between these two sets. They are distinct, yet co-
present. They require each other; together they make the world. Mutal and karu, first things and native
elements, are seen as the "objective correlatives", or rather the correlative objects,(4) of human
experience. It is also significant that in this Tamil system, though gods are mentioned, they are only part
of the scene; they preside, but as natives of the landscape.(5) There seems to be no creator-creature
relation in the early anthologies.

In the karu, "things born into, or native to, a region". No clear distinction is made between
nature and culture; among the native elements of a landscape are listed flora, fauna, tribes as well as
arts, styles, instruments. Furthermore, the Tolkappiyam (582 ff.) considers all native elements, especially
all animate beings, as part of a continuous series(6) graded by degrees of sentience:

Things without any sentience: stones, water, etc.

Beings with one sense (touch): grass, trees, creepers


Beings with two senses (touch and taste):

snails, shellfish

Beings with three senses (touch, taste, smell):

termites, ants

Beings with four senses (touch, taste, smell, vision):

crabs, lobsters, beetles, bees

Beings with five senses (touch, taste, smell, vision,hearing):

birds, beasts, and uncultured people

Beings with six senses (touch, taste, smell, vision, hearing, mind):

human beings and gods.

In poetry, says the Tolkappiyam, the above categories are both used and crossed, say, in
figures like metaphor and personification. Time may become a winged bird, a bird may be seen as a
messenger of love, and love may be felt as a river in flood. As some philosophers would say, a metaphor
is a "category mistake". A special figure (called bhrantimadalankara in Sanskrit) depends on one thing
being mistaken for another. George Hart (1975: 275-77) discusses this figure and points out that,
historically speaking, it occurs first in Tamil and later in Sanskrit poetry. Here is a Tamil example:

What Her Girl Friend Said to Her

These fat cassia trees

are gullible:

the season of rains

that he spoke of

when he went through the stones

of the desert

is not yet here

though these trees

mistaking the untimely rains

have put out

long arrangements of flowers

on their twigs

as if for a proper monsoon.


Kovatattan,

Kuruntokai 66

The heroine is waiting for her lover's return; he has promised to return by the first rains. Cassia
trees usually flower at that time and signal the season of rains. Here the girl friend is asking the heroine
to be patient - not to be mindless and deluded like the cassia trees. Trees have only one sense (touch)
and mistake an untimely sprinkle for the real monsoon. The woman should use her other senses, not
make the same mistake.

Such a figure always involves animals (which lack mind, the sixth sense), or plants (which have
only one sense) as in the above poem. This way of thinking prevents the use of some well-known figures
of speech. For instance, the kind of "pathetic fallacy" that directly attributes mind of animals and objects
is quite rare in Tamil poetry (except in ironic contexts, or where the speaker is overwhelmed by feeling).
However, animal behaviour may suggest witnesses; for only human beings have the sixth sense to see
such parallels, their poetry, and their irony.

According to both the Indian and the Western traditions, every sign is a union of signifier and
signified (e.g., Saussure 1959: 65-67). In the Tamil system of correspondences, a whole language of signs
is created by relating the landscapes as signifiers to the uri or appropriate human feelings.

In this world of correspondences between times, places things born in them, and human
experiences, a word like Kurinci has several concentric circles of meaning: a flower, the mountain
landscape, lovers' union, a type of poem about all these, and musical modes for these poems. But its
concrete meaning, "a mountain flower" is never quite forgotten.

A conventional design thus provides a live vocabulary of symbols; the actual objective
landscapes of Tamil country become the interior landscapes of Tamil poetry. Chart 1 tabulates some of
these features. It would be useful, initially at least, to refer to the list of symbols when reading the
poems.

The Tolkappiyam takes care to add that "birds and beasts of one landscape may sometimes
appear in others": artful poets may work with an "overlap of genres" (tinaimayakkam); they may even
bring in war imagery to heighten the effects of an akam poem. The Tolkappiyam further states that the
above genres are not rigidly separated; the time and place appropriate to one genre may be fused with
the time and place appropriate to another:

Anything other than uri or the appropriate mood may be fused or transformed. (Tol. 15)

The following poem is a good example of this mixture of landscapes.

What She Said

The bare root of the bean is pink

like the leg of a jungle hen,

and herds of deer attack its overripe pods.

For the harshness

Of this season of morning dew


there is no cure

but the breast of my man.

Allur Nanmullai
Kuruntokai 68

The season is morning dew (kurinci), but the bird mentioned is a jungle hen (mullai), the beast
is a deer (mullai). The mixture of kurinci (lovers' union) and mullai (patient waiting) brings out effectively
the exact nuance of the girl's mood, "mixing memory and desire" in a kind of montage.

Chart 1. Some Features of the Five Landscapes

LOVERS' PATIENT LOVER'S ANXIETY IN ELOPEMENT,


UNION WAITING, UNFAITHFULNESS, SEPARATION SHIP,
DOMESTICITY "SULKING SCENES" SEPARATION
FROM LOVER
OR PARENTS
Characteristic Kurinci mullai marutam(queen's- neytal (blue palai (desert
flower (name (jasmine) flower) lily) tree)
of region and
poetic genre)

Landscape Mountains forest, pasture countryside, agri - seashore Wasteland


cultural lowland (mountain or
forest
parched by
summer)

Time Night late evening Morning Nightfall midday

Season cool season, rainy season all seasons all seasons season of
season of evening dew,
morning dew summer

Bird Peacock, Sparrow, Stork, heron Seagull Dove, eagle


parrot jungle hen

Beast monkey, Deer buffalo, freshwater crocodile, fatigued


(including elephant, fish shark elephant,tiger
fish, reptile, horse, bull or wolf, lizard
etc.)
Tree or plant Jackfruit, Konrai (cassia) Mango Punnai Omai (tooth
bamboo,venkai (laurel) brush tree)
(kino) cactus
Water Water fall Rivers Pool Wells Waterless
wells,
stagnant
water
Occupation Hill tribes, Plowman Pastoral Selling fish Wayfarers,
or people guarding millet `occupations and salt, bandits
harvest, fisherfolk
gathering
honey

This is not an exhaustive list; only a few of the elements that appear frequently in the poems are given
here. The Tamil names of gods, heroes, clans, musical instruments, and kinds of food have been
omitted.

This chart first appeared in The Interior Landscape (Ramanujan 1967). For a more complete table, see
Singaravelu (1966:22), or Zvelebil (1973:100).

Thus, for poetry, the hierarchy of components is inverted; the human elements (uri), the native
elements (karu), and the first elements (mutal) are in a descending order of importance for a poet. Mere
nature description or imagism in poetry would be uninteresting to classical Tamil poets and critics, for it
could not "signify"; it would be a signifier without a signified, a landscape (mutal and karu) without an
uri, an appropriate human mood.

Poetic Design

The conventions make for many kinds of economy in poetic design. Consider the following poem:

What She Said

Bigger than earth, certainly,


higher than the sky,
more unfathomable than the waters
is this love for this man
of the mountain slopes
where bees make rich honey
from the flowers of the kurinci
that has such black stalks.
Tevakulattar
Kuruntokai 3
The Kurinci flower and the mountain scene clearly mark this as a kurinci poem about lovers'
union. The union is not described or talked about; it is enacted by the "inset" scene of the bees making
honey from the flowers of the kurinci. The lover is not only the lord of the mountain; he is like the
mountain he owns. Describing the scene describes his passion. The kurinci, being a plant that takes
about twelve years to come to flower, carries a suggestion assimilating the tree to the young tropical
heroine who speaks the poem. The Tolkappiyam calls this technique of using the scene to describe act
or agent, ullurai uvamam, hidden or implicit metaphor.

Furthermore, the poem opens with large abstractions about her love: her love is bigger than
earth and higher than the sky. But it moves toward the concreteness of the black-stalked kurinci, acting
out by analogue the virgin's progress from abstraction to experience. We may remember that this
progression (from the basic cosmic elements to the specific component of a landscape) is also the
method of the entire intellectual framework behind the poetry: moving from first elements to native
elements to human feelings, the poem in the original opens with earth, sky, and water, moves through
the native elements of the mountain landscape (slopes, bees, kurinci) and ends with a human feeling,
natpu, "love".

Evocations designed like these may be seen in poem after poem. Ullurais -let us call them
insets - of the natural scene (somewhat like G.M.Hopkins's inscape) repeat the total action of the poem.
Here are two clear examples from a sequence:

What She Said

In his place, mother,


mud-spattered spotted crabs
sneak into holes at the root
of the nightshade.

O what's the point


of his marrying me then
with sweet talk,
and saying
these other things now?

In his country,
spotted crabs
born in their mother's death
grow up with crocodiles
that devour their young.
Why is he here now?
And why does he
take those women,
a jangle of gold bangles
as they make love,
only to leave them?
Orampokiyar
Ainkurunuru 22, 24
These are marutam poems, poems about infidelity, set in the fertile, well-watered countryside.
In the first, he has done to her what the crabs do to the nightshade - sneaked into the hole and gnawed
at the root. In the second, the spotted crabs and crocodiles of his region, cannibals all, kill and eat the
dear kin they ought to love and protect - like the man himself.

Metaphor and Metonymy

A word about the theory of ullurai uvamam or insets. An inset is an implicit comparison. All
explicit markers of comparison are suppressed. The Tolkappiyam says that explicit comparison belongs
to worldly usage (ulakavalakku), whereas implicit metaphor belongs to poetic usage (ceyyulvalakku).

There are other distinctions to be made: (a) An inset is a correlation of the landscapes and
their contents (karu) to the human scene (uri), (b) Unlike metaphor in ordinary language, an inset is a
structural feature within the poem; it integrates the different elements of the poem and shapes its
message, (c) Unlike metaphor and simile, it often leaves out all the points of comparison and all explicit
markers of comparison (e.g., "like", "as"); such an omission increases manyfold the power of the figure.
As we have seen in the poems, image intensifies image, associations flow into each other. These
"montage" and "dissolve" effects are aided by the flowing syntax of the language, (d) The inset is
essentially a "metonymy,"(7) an in presentia relationship, where both terms are present, where the
signifier and the signified belong to the same universe, share the same "landscape". Both are parts of
one scene. Such a metonymy, rather than metaphor, is the favorite poetic figure of the classical Tamils.
Metaphor implies diversity ("seeing similars in dissimilars" said Aristotle), to be unified by comparison.
Poetry for the Tamils does not unify a multiverse but expresses a universe from within, speaking through
any of its parts. The man belongs to the scene, the scene represents the man. Adapting a remark of
Kenneth Burke's (1945: 6-7) in another context, we may say, "There is implicit in the quality of a scene
the quality of the action implicit in it.... one could deduce the details of the action from the details of the
setting." This kind of 'metonymous metaphor', based on an entire formal scheme, is a special feature of
classical Tamil forms.

But then complex insets are not used everywhere in the poems; they are specifically preferred
in the most structured of Tamil poetic genres - the fivefold akam; they are not used in the peruntinai
(the mismatched affair), nor preferred in the heroic puram poems.

The Tamil theory of comparison deserves an essay to itself. I shall content myself here with
only one more feature. All comparisons, says the Tolkappiyam (276), whether explicit or implicit, involve
terms of comparison. These terms may refer to shape, colour, action, or result. Examples abound in the
poems I have quoted. Like the comparisons between crab and lover, that between cobbler and king is
based on action; when the bare root of the bean is pink like the leg of a jungle hen, the points of
comparison are colour and shape. If we consider colour and shape as special cases of sensory attributes
in general, we can include comparisons based on touch, taste, etc., which occur in the poems, e.g.
"sweeter than milk and honey". Of course, through colour, shape, action, and result, these comparisons
convey much more. Usually, several terms are present in any comparison. For instance, in the poem at
the beginning of the last section, the emphasis is on the action of the bee and the resulting honey. The
shapes of the flower and the bee also suggest obvious sexual images.

The Personae

The dramatis personae in akam poems are limited to a small number: the hero, the heroine,
the hero's friend(s) or messengers, the heroine's friend and foster-mother, the concubine, and
passersby. In the puram poems, the poets mostly speak in their own person, though there are a few
exceptions.

No akam poet speaks in his own voice; and no poem is addressed to a reader. The reader only
overhears what the characters say to each other or to themselves or to the moon. A poem in this
tradition implies, evokes, enacts a drama in a monologue.

The situations (turai) when a hero or heroine or one of their companions may speak out, and
to whom, are closely defined. For example,

The girl friend of the heroine may speak out on the following occasions: when the heroine, left
behind by her lover, speaks of her loneliness; when she helps them elope; when she begs the hero to
take good care of the heroine; when she tries to dissuade the parents from their search for the runaway
couple, or consoles the grieving mother... (Toi. 42)

An interesting convention usually restricts the imagery for different speakers within the
poems. The heroine's images are mostly confined to what surrounds her house, or to the wonder of
discovering his landscape or to hearsay and fantasies about it. The concubine or the heroine's girl friend
or foster-mother have more ranging images: they are of a lower class, and their experience is wider. The
man's imagery has even greater range. Apparently there are no limits to his experience, and therefore to
his imagery. Thus the range of imagery, its quality or content, its very narrowness or width of choice,
indirectly characterizes speaker and social class.

The Two Proprieties

The Tolkappiyam speaks of "two kinds of proprieties: those of drama and those of the world."
The conventional proprieties outlined so far are of the mode of drama. The situations of real life in the
real world are governed by another set of proprieties. The strategy of the poet is to deploy both, to keep
the tension between the forms of art and the forms of the world.

A highly formal scheme of landscapes that have neither name nor history bears within it the
real land, the vivid particulars of bird, beast, insect, drumbeat, and waterfall.

A little-known book in Tamil by a botanist (Cami 1967; see also Varadarajan 1969) documents
one's constant sense that these poets knew their fauna and flora; their botanical observations, for
instance, are breathtakingly minute and accurate. In these poems, over two hundred plants of all the
five Tamil regions are named, described, used in insets and comparisons. Root, stem, bark, bud, petal,
inflorescence, seasons, special kinds of pollination, etc., are observed and alluded to. And their
properties are aptly used to evoke human relationships.

We may ask, as the Tamil commentators do, why did the poets pick the kurinci as the one
flower that will name the mountain landscape and the mood of first love? Though such signs are
symbols, cultural assignments, arbitrary conventions, they are half-motivated by botanical facts: the
kurinci plant, of the Strobilanthes genus, grows only 6,000 feet above sea level; so it is the mountain
flower par excellence. Botanical calendars kept for over a century on South Indian hills like the Nilgiris
show that a kurinci plant comes to flower only from nine to twelve years after it is planted - this
identifies it with the tropical virgin heroine who comes to puberty at the same age.

Kurinci plants flower all at once on the mountain slopes, covering them with millions of
blossoms, certainly a great symbol for the suddenness and the overwhelming nature of first love. It is a
"honey" flower, rich in honey. The bees that frequent it frequent no other, thus making what bee-
keepers call "unifloral honey", which is as rich as it is rare and pure. Furthermore, the kurinci is fiercely
competitive - it permits no other tree to grow in its neighbourhood.

Thus is the real world always kept in sight and included in the symbolic. These poets would
have made a modern poet like Marianne Moore (1951:41) happy: they are "literalists of the
imagination", presenting for inspection in poem after poem "imaginary gardens with real toads in
them."

A Language Within Language

In a sense, the tradition of conventions does everything possible to depersonalize the poetry
of akam. It gives all that can be given to a poet, and makes of poetry a kind of second language.

The poet's language is not only Tamil: landscapes, the personae, the appropriate moods, all
become a language within language. Like a native speaker he makes "infinite use of finite means", to say
with familiar words what has never been said before; he can say exactly what he wants to, without even
being aware of the ground rules of his grammar. If the world is the vocabulary of the poet, the
conventions are his syntax - at least one of the many kinds of poetic syntax.

The lyric poet likes to find ways of saying many things while saying one thing; he would like to
suggest an entire astronomy by his specks and flashes. Toward this end, the Tamil poets used a set of
five landscapes and formalized the world into a symbolism. By a remarkable consensus, they all spoke
this common language of symbols for some five or six generations. Each could make his own poem and
by doing so allude to every other poem which had been, was being, or would be written in this symbolic
language. Thus poem became relevant to poem, as if they were all written by a single hand. The
spurious name Cankam ("Fraternity," "Community") for this poetry was justified not by history but by
the poetic practice.

Puram Poetry

The language of akam is only half the story. The scheme should include the puram poems, as
well as the mismatched and the one-sided love affairs that define by contrast the tight structure of the
fivefold akam.

The puram poems correspond to the akam poems in many ways. The Tolkappiyam finds a
puram parallel for every one of the seven genres of akam. Six of them are named after a flower or a
plant. For instance, vakai, the sirisa tree of the desert region, lends its name to the puram genre
depicting ideals of achievement - parallel to it is palai in love poetry, which depicts a lover going through
the wilderness in search of wealth, fame, etc. Commentators elaborate on the correspondences further.
Why should the kurinci (union) phase of love correspond to vetci (cattle raids) in war? Because, say the
commentators, they both have to do with first encounters, are clandestine, take place at night on
hillsides. Chart 2 displays one set of akam /puram correspondences.

Though these correspondences are in the rhetoric, however, they are not always active in the
poetry. The landscapes are not consistently used as "insets", nor are the distinctions clear. The poem on
the cobbler and the king, for instance, is considered a vakai poem (in praise of kings, etc.), and is a
counterpart of palai (desert: separation, hardship); but the images in the poem do not belong to the
desert at all, but to the mullai (forest, pasture: waiting, marriage): rains, laburnum, evening, and
childbirth. Of course, the colophon could be wrong, or wrongly transmitted, for the mullai images could
fit very well with the parallel vanci (preparation for war). By and large, though, the puram divisions are
not as clear as the ones in akam. For instance, the last two classes (kanci and patan) are not clearly
distinguished from the rest. Patan is a large mixed class, and does not bear the name of a tree or flower
as the others do. Later writers add more separate classes, include in puram the classes of mismatched
and unrequited love, and add a "general" class (potunilai) to make a twelvefold puram. By then only the
"ideal fivefold", from kurinci to palai, is considered akam, "interior". Yet in reading akam and puram
together one is struck as much by the common world they share as by the differences.

Whereas akam poems tend to focus on a single image, puram images rush and tumble over
one another. Yet, as in the following puram poem, the same flowers and landscapes speak of war and
peace, of fertility and desolation:

Chart 2. Puram/Akam Correspondence

Akam Situation/Theme Puram Situation/Theme Common Features


1. kurinci, a first union vetci, cattle-lifting, prelude night, hillside;
mountain scarlet to war clandestine affair
flower ixora
2. mullai, separation (patience) vanci, a preparation for war, forest, rainy season;
jasmine creeper invasion separation from
loved ones
3. marutam, infidelity (conflict) ulinai, a Siege fertile area (city,
queen's cotton etc.),dawn; refusing
flower shrub entry
4. neytal, water separation (anxiety) tumpai, Battle seashore, open
lily white dead battle-
nettle ground, no season;
evening; grief
5. palai, desert elopement, search vakai, ideals of achievement, no particular
tree for wealth, fame, sirissa tree victory landscape; praise
etc.
6. peruntinai* mismatched love ` struggle for no particular
"major type" excellence; endurance landscape; struggle

7. kaikkila? unrequited love patan*, elegy, praise for no particular


"base "praise" heroes, asking for landscape; a one-
relation" gifts, invective sided relationship
( * Not the name of a tree or flower)

Where the Lilies Were in Flower

Fish leaping
in fields of cattle;

easy unplowed sowing


where the wild boar has rooted;

big-eyed buffalo herds


stopped by fences of lilies
flowering in sugarcane beds;

ancient cows bending their heads


over water flowers
scattered by the busy dancers
swaying with lifted hands;

queen's-flower trees full of bird cries


the rustle of coconut trees,
canals from flowering pools
in countries
with cities sung in song:

but your anger


touched them, brought them terror,
left their beauty in ruins,
bodies consumed by Death.

The districts are empty, parched;


the waves of sugarcane blossom,
stalks of dry grass.
The thorny babul of the twisted fruit
neck to neck with the giant black babul.

The she-devil with the branching crest


roams
astraddle on her demon,
and the small persistent thorn
is spread in the moving dust
of ashen battlefields.

Not a sound, nothing animal,


not even dung, in the ruins of public places
that kill the hearts of eager men,
chill all courage,
and shake those who remember.

But here,
the sages have sought your woods.
In your open spaces, the fighters play
with bright-jewelled women.

The traveler is safe on the highway.


Sellers of grain shelter their kin
who shelter, in turn, their kin.

The silver star will not go near


the place of the red planet; so it rains
on the thirsty fields.
Hunger has fled
and taken disease with her.

Great one.
Your land blossoms
everywhere.

Kumattur Kannanar:
on Imayavarampan Netunceralatan
Patirrupattu 13

The plant names are familiar: e.g., sugarcane, lilies, marutam or queen's-flower. The poem
clearly falls into two parts, celebrating the destructive and protective functions of a king. The first part
celebrates the fertility of the pastoral, agricultural, and seashore landscapes (cows, sugarcane, lilies,
etc.); the middle part shows how they have been ravaged and turned into a palai wilderness (the thorny
babuls, etc.) by the war. The third section praises the king's own flourishing kingdom (forests and fields).

The akam/puram correspondences are not strict, but still close enough to allow us to integrate
the two genres. Such correspondences should not be frozen into an exact taxonomy, for the Tamils
never do so - they always make room for "overlap of classes" (tinaimayakkam) and "left-over classes"
(e.g., potunilai).

Taken in the large, the two genres, poems of love and war -akam and puram -complement one
another: contrasted in theme, mood, and structure but unified by imagery. Together, they make the
classical, "bardic" Tamil world. This is why the same poets could write both akam and puram poems.
Some poems explicitly place love and war together:

A Leaf in Love and War

The chaste trees, dark-clustered,


blend with the land
that knows no dryness;
the colors on the leaves
mob the eyes.

We've seen those leaves


on jeweled women,
on their mounds
of love.

Now the chaste wreath lies slashed


on the ground, so changed, so mixed
with blood, the vulture snatches it
with its beak,
thinking it raw meat.

We see this too


just because a young man
in love with war
wore it for glory.

Veripatiya Kamakkanniyar
Purananuru 271

The green leaves of the chaste tree were used as leaf-skirts by women and as laurels by
warriors. So it is emblematic of kurinci (union) in love and ulinai (battle) in war; the mere juxtaposition
brings the irony home sharply.

One more contrast should be noticed. Through akam means "interior," puram, "exterior,"
akam poetry, which a modern reader might expect to be the most private and personal expression, is
the most formally structured genre in the Tamil tradition; as we know, no names, individuals, or places
are usually allowed here, only classes, ideal types; for in this inner world there are no names or
individuals. Puram, the so-called "public poetry", is allowed names, places, expression of personal
circumstances in a real society, a real history, and a certain freedom from the necessities of poetic
convention both in insets and in the landscapes. Thus it is the "public" puram poetry that becomes the
vehicle of personal expression and celebration of historical personages. Indeed, when a woman speaks
in her own voice about her love, the poem is placed in a puram anthology (e.g., p. 119).

Love, Mismatched

Quite in contrast to both akam and puram genres as we have defined them stands the
mismatched affair or peruntinai. Here is an example from Kalittokai, probably the latest of the eight
anthologies.

The Hunchback and the Dwarf:


A Dialogue

Hunchback woman,
the way you move is gentle
and crooked as a reflection
in the water,

what good deeds


did you do that I should want you so?

O mother! (she swore to herself) Some


auspicious moment made you dwarf.
so tiny you're almost invisible.
you whelp born to a man-faced owl,
how dare you stop us to say
you want us? Would such midgets
ever get to touch such as us!

Lovely one,
curvaceous,
convex
as the blade of a plough,
you strike me with a love
I cannot bear.
I can live
only by your grace.
(Look at this creature!)
You dwarf, standing piece of timber,
you've yet to learn the right approach
to girls. In high noon
you come to hold
our hand and ask us to your place.
Have you had any women?

Good woman,
Your waist is higher

than your head, your face a stork,


plucked and skinned,
with a dagger for a beak,
listen to me.
If I take you in the front, your hump
juts into my chest; if from the back
it'll tickle me in odd places.
So I'll not
even try it. But come close anyway and let's touch
side to side.

Chi, you're wicked. Get lost! You half-man!


As creepers hang on only to the crook of a free
there are men who'd love to hold this hunch
of a body close, though nothing fits. Yet, you lecher.
you ask for us sideways. What's so wrong
with us, you ball, you bush of a man.
Is a gentle hunchback type far worse than a cake
of black beans?

But I've fallen for you


(he said, and went after her).
O look, my heart,
at the dallying of this hunchback!
Man, you stand
like a creepy turtle stood up by somebody,
hands flailing in your armpits.
We've told you we're not for you. Yet you hang around.
Look, he walks now like Kama.

Yes, the love-god with arrows, brother to Cama.


Look at this love-god!
Come now, let's find joy,
you in me, me in you; come, let's ask and tell
which parts we touch
I swear by the feet of my king.

All right. O gentle-breasted one. I too will give up


mockery.
But I don't want this crowd in the palace
laughing at us, screaming when we do it,
"Hey, hey! Look at them mounting,
leaping like demon on demon!"
O shape
of unbeaten gold, let's get away from the palace
to the wild jasmine bush. Come,
let's touch close, hug hard
and finish the unfinished,
then we'll be
like a gob of wax on a parchment
made out in a court full of wise men,
and stamped
to a seal.
Let's go.

Marutanilanakanar
Kalittokai 94

Note the unheroic, even antiheroic, mock-heroic quality of this unlovely couple, looking not
for love but frankly for sex; the folk-like bawdiness, the earthy humour. There are no sunset landscapes,
though the poem is classified as marutam. Ploughs, herons, turtles and wild jasmine jostle in it. In a
single phrase like "You whelp born to a man-faced owl", many categories are undone. The piece makes
comedy and poetry by violating over and over the decorum of akam poems. The metaphors are bold,
explicit. The two persons are not even young -one of them is "a stork, plucked and skinned". This is
peruntinai, the "major type", depicting the common human condition, love among the misfits with no
scruples regarding the niceties of time or landscape; moving from mockery to coupling in the course of a
conversation. Their misfit is evident even in their bodies' lack of fit. And they are obviously servants. We
have also shifted from the dramatic monologues of akam and puram to dialogue and interaction, from
lyric to comic drama. As in drama, the characters and their speech change: the hunchback begins with a
royal we in her rejection and ends with an I in yielding; her mocking exclamations to herself drop off.

If the akam has the most tightly structured symbolic language, the peruntinai is free and
realistic, with real toads in real cesspools.

We have not spoken of one genre: the kaikkilai, onesided or unrequited love. There are not
many classical examples of unrequited love. Here is one, from Kuruntokai:

What He Said

When love is ripe beyond bearing


and goes to seed,
men will ride even palmyra stems
as if they were horses;

will wear on their heads the reeking cones of the erukkam bud
as if they were flowers;

will draw to themselves


the laughter of the streets;

and will do worse.

Pereyin Muruvalar
Kuruntokai 17

The most significant observation on kaikkijai (not found in the Tolkappiyam but in later
commentaries) is that such expression of one-sided love is appropriate only to religion. Postclassical
Tamil devotees, preoccupied with their unrequited love for their god, in a cloud of unknowing, created
the most poignant poems of kaikkilai.
Thus the four genres (akam, peruntinai, kaikkilai, and puram) cover and formalize the main
possibilities of Tamil lyric poetry. They define each other mutually. A great deal of Western love poetry
would probably be described by the ancient commentators as the one-sided kaikkilai; a great deal of
modern poetry, fiction, and black comedy as love among the misfits or peruntinai-exploring the
unheroic, the antiheroic, and presenting the ironies of impotence.

Poem becomes relevant to poem within the five akam landscapes and across the four genres
as well.

Akam and Puram as Poetic Devices

Akam ("interior") and puram ("exterior") are not only thematic divisions. The paired opposition
is pervasive in Tamil poetry and culture. The two key categories are related to each other by context and
by contrast. The various meanings to be found in the Tamil Lexicon can be paired as follows:

Akam Puram

1. interior exterior
2. heart, mind body surfaces and extremities,
e.g. back, side, arms
3. self others
4. kin non-kin
5. house, family houseyard, field
6. inland, settlement area far from dense human habitation,
e.g., jungle, desert
7. earth farthest ocean
8. love poems-no names poetry about war and other than
of places or persons (well-matched?) love, a "public"
poetry, with names of real
people and places
9. Codes of conduct Codes of conduct appropriate to
appropriate to akam puram

The meanings complement each other systematically, as we move from context to context, for each
meaning of akam, there is a corresponding sense of puram. It is characteristic of this poetry and its
poetics that the meanings seem to expand and contract in concentric circles, with the concrete physical
particular at the centre, getting more and more inclusive and abstract as we move outward. The context
picks and foregrounds one or another of these circles of meaning.
A poem moves along these various senses of akam and puram: this movement is one of the
forms of the poem. In the course of such interplay, akam/puram contrasts such as inner/outer, self
/other, nature/culture, household/wilderness become part of the form as well as the content of the
poem.

For instance:

What He Said

In this long summer wilderness


seized and devoured by wildfire,
if I should shut my eyes
even a wink,
I see
dead of night, a tall house
in a cool yard, and the girl
with freckles
like kino flowers,
hair flowing as with honey,
her skin a young mango leaf.

Otalantaiyar
Ainkurunuru 324

The poem consists of a number of movements from puram to akam, from the faraway
wilderness to the inhabited house, from the outer landscape to the fantasy inside him; it also moves
from the wildfire and noonday sun (palai, desert, separation) to dead of night, the girl, the yellow kino
flowers, and hair glistening as if with honey (all kurinci images of lovers' union). Yet the whole poem
stays with the palai mood of a lover in a desert faraway from his beloved.

Other subtleties should be noted: "seized and devoured by wildfire", an attribute of the outer
wilderness, is also suggestive of the speaker's inner state. Where he is, is what he is: a scene/agent ratio
(in Burke's terms); a metonymy, an ullurai. He is contained by the wilderness devoured by wildfire; and
he also contains it within him. But when he closes his eyes, he contains the house of his beloved in
fantasy. We should also remember that palai is one phase of a cycle- he is going away from his woman
"for education, work, earning wealth, war" - all puram concerns. Among the relations between akam
and puram, household and the world, one should include the rhythm of a man going out into the world
and coming back into the family. Only a warrior who dies or an ascetic who renounces doesn't return -
both are themes for puram poems. He passes through the palai wilderness on his way to do "the world's
work", and survives by remembering his home and woman, in the heat and wildfire of the outer desert
and the inner. Of course, heat and wildfire for the separated lover have sexual overtones.

In reading these poems, one need not explicitly trace akam/puram shifts. They guide our
responses subtly, surprising us often, by turning inside out. Akam and puram are part of the very
choreography of poetic moves in Tamil poems. As one learns the "second language" of these poems,
one also learns to sense the "ins and outs"; one follows the rhythms without labeling them, as one soon
learns to read the language of cassias and tigers and waterfalls without running to a glossary of symbols.
Looked at in this way, each poem is a structure and a process. While akam and puram, and the
five landscape genres, are opposed to each other as overall genres, and clearly defined as such, within
each poem they work as phases, change points. One might even think of the action of each poem as a
crossing of thresholds, across genres: the above palai poem crosses from the outer landscape to the
interior one, and also from the wilderness to the human settlement. Each of the genres enacts a
characteristic crossing of the akam/puram oppositions.

Typically, the movement of akam poems is a crossing from outer to inner; from outer body to
the heart within, in memory or imagination (kurinci); from sea to land (neytal), from warfield to home
(mullai); from home to wilderness in actuality, from wilderness to home in memory (palai); from the
concubine who is no kin, who lives on the town's outskirts, to home, wife, and kin (marutam).

Puram poems, like the following, tend to start inside a house (akam) and move, like the tiger,
out into the world (puram):

You stand against the pillar


of my hut and ask:
Where is your son?
I don't really know.

My womb was once


a lair
for that tiger.
You can see him now
only in battlefields.

Kavarpentu
Purananuru 86

Often the poetic moment is actually poised on the threshold, though a figure in the poem may
move (actually, or in imagination) from outer to inner. Many marutam poems are literally enacted at the
door which is shut in the face of the unfaithful returning husband. The most extraordinary of these
"door-shutting" (vayil maruttal) poems moves from puram to akam, from the public realm of townsmen,
kinsmen, and the wedding ceremony, step by step to the privacy of the bedroom and finally to the
ultimate akam or "interior" of the bride's private parts:

What He Said
after a quarrel, remembering his wedding night

Serving in endless bounty


white rice and meat
cooked to a turn,
drenched in ghee,
to honored guests,

and when the bird omens were right,


at the perfect junction
of the Wagon Stars with the moon
shining in a wide soft-lit sky.
wedding site decorated, gods honored,
kettledrum and marriage drum
sounding loud the wedding beat,

the women who'd given her a bridal bath


-piercing eyes looking on, unwinking-
suddenly gone,
her near kin
strung a white thread on her
with the split soft-backed leaves
of the sirissa,
and with the aruku grass,

its sacred root a figurine,


its buds cool, fragrant,
dark-petaled, blue
as washed sapphire,

brought forth by the thundering skies


of first rains in valleys
where adolescent calves
feed on them.
they brought her to me
decked in new clothes,
rousing my desire
even in the wedding canopy,
wedding noises noisy as pounding rain

on that first night,

and when they wiped her sweat,


and gave her to me,
she splendid with ornament,
I said to her

who was body now to my breath,


chaste without harshness,
wrapped all over in a robe
new, uncrushed,

"It's hot. Sweat is breaking out


on that crescent, your brow.
Open your robe a little,
let the wind cool it,"
and even as I spoke,
my heart hasty with desire,
I pulled it off

and she stood exposed,


her form shining
like a sword unsheathed,
not knowing how to hide herself,
cried Woy!
in shame, then bowed, begged of me,
as she loosened her hair
undoing the thick colorful wreath
of broken lily petals

and, with the darkness of black full tresses,


hand-picked flowers on them
still luring the bees,

hid
her private
parts.

Virrurru Muteyinanar
Akananuru 13

Before we leave the manifold of akam/puram, we must note some more ways in which the
two genres differ. Only the full cycle of love between well-matched lovers is called akam; all else,
including ill-matched love, the life and death of heroes, their relations to land, clan, enemy, and bard,
were called puram. The Tamil world was divided between family, or "household" (one meaning of akam)
and the "kingdom", the outer world. Women were central to the former, as heroes (named kings and
chieftains and unnamed warriors) were central to the latter. In an akam anthology like Kuruntokai, only
62 poems are assigned to the man, but 180 to the woman, 140 to her girl friend, 14 others to women
characters like foster-mothers and concubines. In a puram anthology like Purananuru, hardly a handful
are spoken by women-about 18 songs are about or by women characters, mothers, wives, or widows of
heroes. I am not counting the songs by women poets, such as the 13 by Auvaiyar (e.g., Purananuru 101-
4), which she sings not as a woman but as a bard about her patron.

In many akam poems, a woman's body is suggestively present to our senses -the smell or
texture of her hair, the shape of her breast, her brow, her mound of love or black-snake pubis, her leaf-
skirts, the conch-shell bangles, her teeth like rice sprouts, her skin like young mango leaf, her great
shoulders and red-streaked eyes, and in one poem even the taste of her saliva-yet a woman is never
described in more than one or two details in each poem. We do not hear much about the man's
appearance; we know more about what he has and about his country's scenery than about him. As we
hear about her glittering bangles and ornaments, we also hear of his bright spear, his horses, chariots,
garlands, anklebands, sometimes a chest enlarged by the drawing of bows. His spouse's chastity and
virtue are also a chieftain's ornaments and his magical shields against disaster, as effective as his own
"upright scepter" {cenkol, as contrasted with kotunkol "crooked scepter"). It is significant that in the
akam poems, rarely is the woman seen as the mature mother of a grown man, as she is in the puram. As
in other heroic milieus, women bards, and poems in women's voices, enlist filial and familial feeling in
the cause of war - especially that most compelling of family feelings, a mother's pride (or shame) about
her son.

NOTES

[Notes 1 and 2 in the original refer to matter not included in this extract. Ed.)
3. This fact adds further subtlety to the symbolism. Palai (wasteland) associated with separation
can happen even in the heart of union (kurinci or mountain landscape).
4. "Objective correlatives" (Eliot 1950), and what I have called correlative objects, are very
different things: the first are sought and found by individual poets, the latter are given by the culture in
which the poets dwell.
5. From now on, I translate tinai as "landscape." But tinai has several meanings: "class, genre,
type", as in akattinai "the akam genre." In a more specific sense, tinai is a complex concept defined in
the poetics for Tamil poetry: a genre is represented by a region or landscape, its nature and culture, and
the human feelings associated with them-in short, an entire ecosystem used for poetic expression.
"Landscape" is a convenient metonymy for the whole cluster of notions. Like the Tamils, we will also use
the names kurinci, mullai etc. for the landscapes and the genres associated with them.
6. This series is clearly reminiscent of the Jain "ladder of life" of ekendriya ("one sense"),
dvendriya ("two-sense"), etc., all the way to the gods. See Zimmer (1960:277) for an exposition of this
Jain system. Though several such Jain elements are found or "borrowed" in the Tamil texts, their use is
not Jain at all; its thrust is not metaphysical, religious, nor does it imply an ethic of nonviolence. Instead,
it adds one more "concrete" figure to the poetry. The subject of Jain ideas in early Tamil literature
merits exploration.
7. My use of "metaphor" and "metonymy" follows Jakobson (1971: 254-7), whom I find
suggestive. As I show below, the categories cannot be mutually exclusive, nor can all figures be divided
into these two super-classes. For a cogent criticism, see Genette (1982).

-----------------------------------------------------------------

BIMAL KRISHNA MATILAL

After studying at Calcutta and Harvard, B.K. Matilal (1935-91) taught at the Universities of
Toronto, Pennsylvania, Chicago and California (Berkeley). Between 1976 and 1991, the year of his death,
he was the Spalding Professor of Eastern Religions and Ethics at Oxford and a Fellow of All Souls College.

Among his more important publications are Logical and Ethical Issues of Religious
Belief(University of Calcutta, 1982), Logic, Language and Reality (Motilal Banarsidass, 1985), Perception:
An Essay on Classical Indian Theories of Knowledge (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1986) and The Word and
the World (Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1990).

Matilal occupies a very important place among academic philosophers dealing with India as a
field of study. Unlike his predecessors in the field, Matilal avoids being confined to speculative
philosophy alone. In the tradition of Russell and Wittgenstein, he engages his attention in the language
of philosophy and the philosophy of language. We see in his work a fruitful combination of profound
understanding of modern philosophical schools and methods and an intimate knowledge of Hindu and
Buddhist classics. It is therefore that Matilal is able to illuminate modern Western linguistics in the light
of Buddhist theories of perception as well as to bring back into intellectual currency the sphota debate
between Bhartrhari and Nagarjuna-Dinnaga. The extract reproduced here forms a chapter in Matilal's
The Word and The World(pp. 84-98).

Bhartrhari's View of Sphota

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