Sandesha Kavya
The sandesha kavya or a duta kavya is a literary form and genre of Sanskrit poetry. Described as a messenger poem, the narrative of a sandesha kavya commonly consists of an exiled lover sending a message to a separated beloved through a messenger, who could be a natural element such as a bird, a cloud, the wind, or a human being. The genre combines the themes of love and separation with descriptions of the landscapes of the natural world. Kalidasa's Meghaduta is regarded to be the most popular example of this literary form.
Etymology
In Sanskrit, sandeśa means "message", and kāvya means "poem" or "poetry".Literature
- Ghatakarparakavya: The earliest example of a sandesha kavya is the Ghatakarparakavya, a poem by the poet Ghatakarpara, on the message sent to a lover by a love-lorn woman, appealing to a morning cloud to act as her messenger. The poem is of twenty-four stanzas in five different metres.
- Meghaduta: The Meghaduta recounts how a yaksha, a subject of Kubera, the god of wealth, after being exiled for a year to Central India for neglecting his duties, convinces a passing cloud to take a message to his wife at Alaka on Mount Kailasha in the Himalaya mountains. The methodology employed by Kalidasa in the construction of his Meghaduta, a lyric in a little over one hundred verses that personifies objects of nature and describes nature with all its beauties and glories, has been imitated by later Sanskrit poets.
- Pavanaduta: The Pavanadhuta was written by Dhoyin, a 12th century CE court poet of the Gauda king Lakshmana of the Sena dynasty. The poet narrates tells the story of a gandharva maiden called Kuvalayavatī who falls in love with King Lakshmana. She asks the wind to take her message of love to the king.
- Mayurasandesha: In Udaya’s Mayurasandesha, the messenger is the peacock.
- Hamsasandesha: The plot of the Hamsasandesha of Vedanta Desika describes Rama sending a swan as a messenger to his wife Sita after she was abducted by Ravana to Lanka.
The Mālatīmādhava by Bhavabhuti uses this form in act IX 25-26, in which an abandoned Mādhava searches for a cloud to take his message to Mālatī.
The Cakorasandeśa of Vāsudeva of Payyur features a message sent from a wife to a husband of this genre.
The Unnuneeli Sandesham, one of the oldest literary works in the Malayalam language, was composed as a sandesha kavya.