This court epic describes events leading up to the birth of Kumára, the
war god who will defeat the demon Táraka. The gods try to use Kama, the
Indian Cupid, to make the ascetic god Shiva fall in love with the
daughter of the Himalaya mountain. Kama fails, and is burnt to ashes by
the angry Shiva. Then Parvati, the daughter of the mountain, herself
turns to asceticism to win the husband she longs for. She is successful,
and the climax of the poem is the marriage and lovemaking of Shiva and
Parvati, parents of the universe.
The greatest long poem in classical Sanskrit, by the greatest poet of
the language, Kali-dasa's The Birth of Kumára is not exactly a love
story but a paradigm of inevitable union between male and female, played
out on the immense scale of supreme divinity. In this court-epic, the
events are described leading up to but not including the birth of
Kumára, the war god destined to defeat the demon Táraka.
Co-published by New York University Press and the JJC Foundation
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