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AŚVAGHOṢA |
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Aśvaghoṣa,
whose name means `horse’s voice,’ was one of India's greatest
poets. He was born in Sāketa in the 2nd century CE, he
converted to Buddhism in his youth and became court poet to King
Kaniṣka. The Buddha's teachings had by then brought about a
revolution in Indian religious and philosophical thought, as well as
in the arts too. Within 500 years of the Buddha's passing, Buddhists
were using all the visual and literary arts to draw people towards
the Dhamma, explain it to them and awaken their faith. Aśvaghoṣa
epitomised this movement. He wrote the Saundaranandakāvya, a
poem retelling the conversion of the Buddha's cousin Nanda;
the Sāriputraprakaraṇa, a play in nine acts about the life
of Sāriputta; the Gaṇḍistotra, a charming eulogy
to the monastery bell and the Vajraśuci, a sustained critique
of the Hindu caste system. But Aśvaghoṣa's most famous work
was the Buddhacarita, a retelling of the life of
the Buddha, which had a profound effect on the cultured class
and later influenced many great Sanskrit poets.
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