ABSTRACT

The Gadāyuddham (The Duel of the Maces) is a kāvya (poetry) composed in classical Kannada literary style at the turn of the eleventh century. It is written in campū, a genre that developed in the tenth century as a mixture of poetry and prose. Ranna’s poem is remarkably dramatic in nature and is a meditation on the cost of war. Crisp dialogue, body gestures and imagery fill the poem. It is as if the poet were giving us directions for a play.
Ranna employs ‘flashbacks’, a technique called simhāvalōkana, that is, a lion turning casually to glance behind him. Ranna builds up to the duel through characters recalling episodes of injury or through lamentation. The duel occupies only a short space in the eighth canto, but Ranna takes this time to fill in past episodes and reflect on the impact of war. This thousand-year-old poem will interest scholars as well as lay readers.

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chapter |2 pages

Prathamāśvāsam

chapter |36 pages

Canto One

chapter |28 pages

Canto Two

chapter |40 pages

Canto Three

chapter |34 pages

Canto Four

chapter |32 pages

Canto Five

chapter |28 pages

Canto Six

chapter |32 pages

Canto Seven

chapter |32 pages

Canto Eight

chapter |24 pages

Canto Nine

chapter |13 pages

Canto Ten