Bhatti’s Poem: The Death of Rávana

By Bhaṭṭi
Translated by Oliver Fallon

Bhatti’s Poem: The Death of Rávana

To the dry bones of grammar Bhatti gave juicy flesh in his poem, telling the greatest Indian story in clear elegant Sanskrit. Composed in the seventh century CE, in South India, “Bhatti’s Poem: The Death of Rávana” is both a poetic retelling of Rama’s adventures, and a compendium of grammatical and rhetorical examples for students. Its finest passages stands comparison with the best of Sanskrit poetry.

This is the perfect companion to Pánini’s groundbreaking grammatical treatise, the “Eight Books” (Aṣṭādhyāyī), studied intensely for the millennium before Bhatti, just as it is today by linguisticians worldwide. Bhatti’s study aid to Pánini’s abstruse text gives examples disguised as the gripping, morally improving “Ramáyana” story. His systematic illustration of the canon of figures of speech is an important text in the history of Sanskrit poetics. One canto even gives a pleasant, accessible taster of the Prakrit language. In Bhatti’s own words: “This composition is a lamp to those whose eyes have language as their goal.”

The story goes that Bhatti’s outdoors grammar class was one day interrupted by an elephant ambling between him and his pupils. By Hindu law this intrusion cancelled class for a year. Lest vital study time be lost, Bhatti composed his poem to teach grammar without textbooks. Ever since, “Bhatti’s Poem: The Death of Rávana” has been one of the most popular poems in Sanskrit literature.

566 pp. | ISBN-13: 978-0-8147-2778-2 | ISBN-10: 0-8147-2778-6 | Co-published by New York University Press and JJC Foundation

Excerpts

Canto 7: “The Search for Sita”
(pp. 133–45; 7.1–7.60)
(20 pp)

Download Excerpts (pdf)
Download CSL Front Matter (pdf)
Download Extra Materials
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Download the title page and table of contents and one chapter of the book (in English and Sanskrit on facing pages), bundled together as a .pdf file. You can also download the CSL Front Matter (6pp, 1.3mb). It describes how we transliterate the Sanskrit text in the Roman alphabet and includes a guide to pronunciation. It also explains our system of representing phonetic fusion (sandhi).

You can set Adobe Acrobat Reader to display the Sanskrit text and translation in facing page view. Simply go to “View” in the toolbar, select “Page Layout” and click on “Facing.”

eCSL Word Frequency Counts

Top 50 Verbs

RankUnique WordsNumber of Occurrences
1Like174
2Made94
3Said74
4Went72
5See55
6Go55
7Come50
8Spoke50
9Saw47
10Struck46
 
11Came46
12Killed41
13Grove41
14Took40
15Kill40
16Cut40
17Make39
18Filled39
19Shone33
20Sought33
 
21Destroyed32
22Became30
23Brought29
24Delighted27
25Fell27
26Making25
27Fight24
28Take24
29Live24
30Bear23
 
31Seen23
32Tell23
33Set22
34Seeing22
35Shining21
36Lost21
37Crushed21
38Seeking20
39Reached20
40Eat20
 
41Know20
42Done20
43Bearing19
44Wish19
45Gone19
46Wishing18
47Protect18
48Become18
49Roared18
50Speak18

Top 50 Nouns

RankUnique WordsNumber of Occurrences
1Rama264
2Monkey(s)245
3Demon(s)189
4Enemy(ies)184
5Sita151
6Ravana117
7King116
8Mountain(s)116
9Tree(s)107
10Battle102
 
11Water(s)84
12Hanuman83
13Arrows82
14Lanka81
15Weapon(s)81
16Son(s)78
17Lord77
18Men (man)76
19Earth75
20Lakshmana67
 
21Vibhishana62
22Forest58
23Fire57
24City57
25Sky57
26Gods57
27Ocean56
28Two55
29Indra55
30Sun55
 
31World52
32Body(ies)51
33Grief43
34Elephants43
35Moon43
36Wind42
37Birds39
38Blood38
39Horses38
40Cloud(s)38
 
41Women37
42Heart37
43People37
44Eyes36
45Army36
46Chariot36
47Fear35
48Sugriva35
49Rama’s34
50Canto33