पृष्ठम्:हम्मीरमहाकाव्यम्.pdf/५

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पुटमेतत् सुपुष्टितम्

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work. Part of this will bear reproduction here in an English dress:--

 “IIail, Krishna Chachha, who gladdened the whole earth, the beauty of whose person was like that of a blooming bunch of the Nuvajáli flower, and whose praises were oelebrated by crowds of learned men, who might well bo compared to so many black humming-bees;–he whose feet were ever borne on the crowns of the followers of the Jain religion !

 “In the circle of the Suris, whose actions are the homes of' wonders, in time, Jayasimha Suri was born, who was the crowning ornament of the wise; who easily vanquished in disputation Saranga, who was the leading poet among those who were able to write poetical compositions in six languages, and who was honest among the most honest; who wrote three works,— (1) Nyáya Sárațiká, (2) A New Grammar, (3) A. Poem on Kumâra Nripali, and who hence became known as the chief of those who know the three sciences of logic, grammar, and poesy,

 “To tho lotus-like Gädi of Jayasimha, Nayachandra is like the life-giving sun ; who is the essence of the knowledge of the sciences, who is the exciting moon to the sea of the races of the poets. This poet, has spirits raised to the height of the subject by a revelation imparted to him in a dream by the king Hammiraa hímself, has composed this poem [१],” which is gratifyimg to the assembly of the kings, and in which the heroic (rasa) is developed.

 “Tho author in lineal descent is the grandson of Jayasimha Suri, the great poet, but in that of poesy his son.

 “Let not good readers take into much account the faults of expression that, I may have fallen into. How can I, who am of

  1. Our poet also says that he was baited to the composition of this poem by a rash assertion, which some courtiers of King 'Tomara Viranna, had the presumption to make in the presence of our poet, that there existed no one now who could compose a poem that would come up to the excellence of the works of old Sanskrit poets. King Tomitta Viranna, whoever he was, appears to have lived seventy years before Akbar.