SHADAKSHARADEVA
Even though Shadakshara chose to write in Champu,
his subject matter was radically different. He decides to write about the great
Shivabhaktas, not from Karnataka, but from the
neighboring Tamilnadu. Satyendra
Chola and Soundara Chola are typical monarchs from the South. Even Shabarashankaravilasa is a tribute to the Lord Shiva, worshipped in
iconic form.
‘Rajashekharavilasa’ is his first and the most
popular work. It’s based on “Bhavachintaratna’ by Gubbi Mallanarya. This is the
story of Satyendra Chola
who undergoes an ordeal by fire to prove his sense of justice and devotion to
Lord Shiva. Rajashekhara and Mitavachana
are riding down the royal route and a young boy Shankara
is trampled under the feet of the horse ridden by Mitavachana.
Satyendra hands down death punishment to his own son Rajashekhara. Rajashekhara’s head
will be chanting ‘Namah Shivaya’
even after the execution. Others follow suit by cutting off their own heads.
Lord Shiva makes an appearance and the story meanders to a happy
conclusion.
Shadakshara has narrated this story in an exalted style
creating opportunities for an exhibition of his erudition. The laments of Tirukolavinachi the mother of young Shankara
are very touchingly depicted. The importance given to human values is very
admirable. ‘Basavarajavijaya’ also known as ‘Vrushabhendravijaya’
is essentially a compendium of the biographical sketches of eighty Shivasharanas. This contains forty two sections
constituting more than 3500 poems. ‘Shabarashankaravilasa’
is a short work delineating the confrontation of Arjuna
with Shiva in 467 poems. Other Kannada works by Shadakshara
are essentially devotional with scant literary merit. ‘Kavikarnarasaayana’
in Sanskrit is about Soundara Chola
another Shivabhakta from the Chola
kingdom. Shadaksharadeva
made a valiant attempt of swimming against the tides by trying to revive the Champu tradition. It gained some recognition among the
scholarly bunch of readers as also those who are very religious. This has been
the fate of a long list of poets who try to revive the prosodic forms and
stylistic choices of the past.
(A total of twenty three works
in Kannada [14] and Sanskrit [9].)
10. References: ‘1. Shadaksharadeva’ Chandramouli S.Naikar, 1995,