Guest guest Posted October 27, 1996 Report Share Posted October 27, 1996 srimatE lakshmi-nrsumha parabrahmaNE namaha sri vedanta desika guravE namaha Dear "bhagavatOttamas", Often language holds the key to some of its own mysteries. If one is ever watchful of the dance that words-at-play perform or if one is ever attentive to the cadences that they generate through the works of poets (especially one as great as Swami Desikan), one can, I believe, secure a richer awareness of the larger reality that lies veiled behind them. How wonderful has been the past few days spent in subjecting to intensive scrutiny the Lord's most celebrated "kalyana guna" i.e. "daya" as eulogised by Swami Desikan! How thought-provoking too! the assertion that the quality of "kshama", the actual "deed", being superior to mere "feeling" which "daya" or "karuna" is ! I sincerely believe that Swami Desikan himself would have enjoyed such challenges to his poetic vision! I still am unable to persuade myself that Sriman Tatachar is right in his assertion. Y/day in my posting I had referred to the 72nd verse of the Daya Satakam in support of why I am unable to endorse Sriman Tatachar's view. Today I put forth another reason and this time it is based on the way we use language to describe language !! We all know very well that often we have no choice but to resort to figurative expressions to enhance the effectiveness of communication of a certain thought or idea or concept. For e.g. I am basically a financial professional and very often I find myself using the expression "bottom-line consciousness".I am aware that when I use this term I have at the back of my mind a whole host of inter-related and associative ideas to convey and which cannot be adequately evoked by use of the more simple synonym, "profits". I say this because when I consciously use the term "bottom-line consciousness" I know I want to say something more, convey more, than I know I would be if I were to use the term "return-on-investment (ROI) consciousness". This is because the former expression, by virtue of common parlance, appeals to a wider, but lay, audience whereas the latter expression would convey a narrower but more specific message to a group of specialist accountants. This I would do, although I would know, as a good accountant(which I think I am!), fully well that "ROI consciousness" is a much more definitive expression than the loosely structured term "bottom-line".I would know that I simply have no way of reducing "ROI" to a figure of speech of acceptable quality to professional accountants although the popular belief is that "ROI" and "botton-line" must be synonymous. Similarly, if you apply the above yardstick to the use of Swami Desikan's use of synonyms of "daya" one would tend to argue that "anukampa" is indeed a unique and unparalleled expression. This is because the synonyms like "karunadaya" and "krupa", we know, have crept into common parlance by being associated with such metaphors (you could call the process as "metaphorization") like "daya-sindhO" or "karuna-sagara" (ocean of kindness) or "krupa-nidhi" (fund of mercy). But when you look at the case of "anukampa" I don't see there is anywhere in literature or common parlance (in as much as my limited knowledge can appreciate) an instance of the term being similarly "metaphorised". This means language itself is helpless and unable to render the term amenable to figurative manipulation! What therefore cannot be metaphorised must indeed be, I conclude, a unique, sui generis mode of expression. In this context it is needless to even consider a term like "kshama" which struggles to qualify, as we have seen, as even a synonym of "daya". This is the reason why I think that Swami Desikan's use of the exquisite synonym "anukampa", to denote the Lord's quality of mercy, is that much MORE SPECIAL. Or at least definitely, in my "professional opinion", as special as "ROI" is to "bottom-line" !!! Srimate srivan satagopa sri narayana yatindra mahadesikAya namaha most humbly, sudarshan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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