Re: Vishwambhara
Nyayapathi Srinivasa Rao (vasu@india.hp.com)
Fri, 30 May 97 11:47:53 IST
Sree Subbarao gaaru says:
Let me first appreciate Sree Subbarao garu for he
really seems to have been deeply moved by si.na.re.
The very fact that he quotes every imaginable phrase
of aesthetic origin makes it clear that si.na.re certainly
influenced him. The credit goes to Subbarao gaaru.
It shouldn't surprise anybody that a soul hungering and
thirsting for evocative poetry is quick to appreciate si.na.re's
gibberish as aesthectically fulfilling.
> Vishwambhara. It's tribute to human spirit. The journey of man
>.....................................................................
All the above can be said about any poem that speaks generalisms
about man. Replace Viswambhara with any other poem. The rest of your
commentary still reamins true.
So much to 'the association of sensibilities'!
Since SreeSree's Three Cheers to Man 'maanavuDaa maanavuDaa'
it's become just fashionable for second cuckoos to re-order the
same old words to effect a deja-vu dullness.
> >addina biLLAlu ciTlipaDDAyi.
>.............................
The lines betray si.na.re's insensitivity to words,
his inability to sustain any feeling in his readers and
his contempt for a common reader's love for poetry.
> Who was there to discover and appreciate all this beauty of the cosmos?
>.......................................................................
I say again the same:
So much to the association of sensibilities!
> >cIkaTikAgitam mIda
>....................
si.na.re has mastered the 'art' of choosing ONLY those
combinations of words and phrases which hurt your ears
and insult your longing for #okka manci maaTa#
I request you to read ajantaa, bairaagi and others.
> The esthetic merit of an object has two sides. One that is inherent to the
>...........................................................................
So much to...........
> >intakU nEnevaNni?
A very good question that si.na.re asks of himself.
--
Regards & Thanks
Vasu.