Sri Aurobindo
The Harmony of Virtue
Early Cultural Writings — 1890-1910
Kalidasa
Kalidasa's Characters
III. Minor Characters [5]
Manavaca on the other hand is an element of weakness rather than of strength. I have already spoken of the progressive attenuation of the traditional buffoon part which keeps pace with Kalidasa's dramatic development. Gautama in the Malavica is a complete and living personality who has much to say to the action of the plot; witty, mischievous, mendacious and irresponsible, he adds to the interest of the play even independently of this functional importance. But in the Urvasie to have made the main action of the plot turn in any way on the buffoon would have been incongruous with the high romantic beauty of the drama and therefore a serious dramatic error. The function of Manavaca is accordingly reduced to that of an interlocutor; he is there because Pururavas1 must have somebody to confide in and talk with, otherwise his only dramatic purpose is to give rise by his carelessness to the episode of Aushinarie's jealousy and self-subdual. Nevertheless his presence affects the composite tone of the picture. He is other than the buffoons of the Malavica and Shacountala, far more coarse in the grain, far less talented and high-spirited than Gautama, yet not a stupid2 block3. He has, along with the stock characteristics of gluttony, ugliness and cowardice, an occasional coarse humour, infertile and broad, and even a real gift of commonsense and rather cynical practicality, to say nothing of that shadow of the purple flung across the speech of all those who associate habitually with Pururavas4; he is at the same time low in mind, unable to understand characters higher than his own. His best virtue is perhaps the5 absence of all pretensions and readiness to make a gibe on6 himself. Such a figure necessarily tends to set off by its drab colour and equal7 dimensions the lyric idealism of Pururavas8, the radiant charm of Urvasie and the pale loftiness of the Queen. But it is by his place in the picture and not what9 he is in himself that he justifies his existence. He does not attract or interest, indeed he at times only just escapes being tiresome. At the same time he lives.
Among all these minor figures who group themselves around the two protagonists and are of purely accessory interest, there is one who stands out and compels the eye by her10 nobler proportions and her independent personality. Queen Aushinarie has no real claim by any essentiality in her action11 on12 the large space she occupies in the play; her jealousy does not retard and her renunciation sanctifies rather than assists the course of Pururavas’13 love for Urvasie. The whole episode in which she figures fits more loosely into the architecture of the play14 than can be exampled elsewhere in Kalidasa's dramatic workmanship. The interest of her personality justifies the insertion of the episode rather than the episode that justifies the not inconsiderable space devoted to her. The motif of her appearance is the same conventional element of wifely rivalry, the jealousy of the rose-in-bloom against the rose-in-bud that has formed the whole groundwork of the Malavica. There the groundwork, here its interest is brief and episodical. And yet none of the more elaborated figures in the earlier play, not even Dharinie herself, is as fine and deep a conception as the wife of Pururavas15. Princess of Kashie, daughter16 of the Ushinars17, acknowledged by her rival to deserve by right of her noble majesty of fairness the style of Goddess and of Empress, we feel that she has a right to resent the preference to her even of an Apsara18 from heaven and the completeness of Pururavas’19 absorption in Urvasie gives a tragic significance to her loss which is not involved in the lighter loves and jealousies of Vidisha20. The character is more profoundly and boldly conceived. The passion of her love strikes deeper than the mere heyday of youth and beauty and the senses in Iravatie, as the noble sadness of her self-renunciation moves more powerfully than the kind and gentle wilfulness21 of Queen Dharinie. And in the manner of her delineation there is more incisiveness, restraint22 with a nobler economy of touch. The rush of her jealousy comes with less of a storm than Iravatie's but it has fierier23 and keener edge and it is felt to be the disguise of a deep and mighty love. The passion of that love leaps out in the bitter irony of her self-accusal:
Not yours the guilt, my lord. I am in fault
Who force my hated and unwelcome face
Upon you.
And again when in the very height of her legitimate resentment she has the sure consciousness of her after-repentance:
And yet the terror
Of the remorse I know that I shall feel
If I shun24 his kindness, frightens me.
Anger for the time sweeps her away, but we are prepared for the25 repentance and sacrifice in the next act. Even in her anger she has been imperially strong and restrained and much of the poetic force of her renunciation comes from the perfect sweetness, dignity and self-control with which she acts in that scene. The emotion of self-sacrificing love breaks out only once at the half-sneering reproach of the buffoon:
Dull fool!
I with the death of my own happiness
Would give my husband ease. From this consider
How dearly I love him.
Putting gently but sorrowfully away from her the king's half-sincere protestations of abiding love, she goes out of the drama, a pure, devoted and noble nature, clad in gracious white and sylvanly adorned with flowers, her raven tresses spangled with young green of sacred grass; yet26 the fragrance of her flowers, of sacrifice and the mild beauty of the moonlight remain behind her. She does not reappear unless it is in the haste of Urvasie to bring her recovered child to his “elder mother”. This haste with its implied fullness27 of gratitude and affection is one of Kalidasa's careful side-touches to tell28 us better than words that in spirit and letter she has fulfilled utterly the vow she made on the moonlit terrace under seal of
The divine wife and husband, Rohinie29
And Mrigalanchan30 named the spotted moon.
The deepening of moral perception, the increase in power and pathos, the greater largeness of drawing and finer emotional strength and restraint show the advance Kalidasa has made in dramatic characterisation. Grace, sweetness, truth to life and character, perfect and delicate workmanship, all that reveals the presence of the artist were his before; but the Urvasie reveals a riper and larger genius widening the31 scope, raising mightier vans before yet it takes32 its last high and surpassing flight.
Later edition of this work: The Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo.- Set in 37 volumes.- Volume 1.- Early Cultural Writings (1890 — 1910).- Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 2003.- 784 p.
1 2003 ed.: Pururavus
2 2003 ed.: a mere stupid
3 2003 ed.: block like [Mandhavya].
4 2003 ed.: Pururavus
5 2003 ed.: his
6 2003 ed.: of
7 2003 ed.: squat
8 2003 ed.: Pururavus
9 2003 ed.: not by what
10 2003 ed.: eye both by
11 2003 ed.: actions
12 2003 ed.: to
13 2003 ed.: Pururavus’
14 2003 ed.: piece
15 2003 ed.: Pururavus
16 2003 ed.: Kashie and daughter
17 2003 ed.: Ushenors
18 2003 ed.: Opsara
19 2003 ed.: Pururavus’
20 2003 ed.: Videsha
21 2003 ed.: wifeliness
22 2003 ed.: incisiveness and restraint
23 2003 ed.: has a fierier
24 2003 ed.: spurn
25 2003 ed.: her
26 2003 ed.: but
27 2003 ed.: fulness
28 2003 ed.: telling
29 2003 ed.: Rohinnie
30 2003 ed.: Mrigolanchon
31 2003 ed.: its
32 2003 ed.: take