A Hundred Measures of Time

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by Nammalwar


  147. Bharati, The Sacred Book of Four Thousand, p. 699.

  148. The two major ritual traditions at the Alvar Tirunagari temple associated with Nammālvār’s poetry are the Araiyar Cēvai and the Kavi Pāṭṭu. Araiyar Cēvai takes its most elaborate form during the Annual Festival of Recitation (Adhyāyanotsavam) that occurs over the course of twenty days in the month of Mārkali (mid-December to mid-January). Today, the Cēvai is performed by Brahmin men, who are hereditary performers, at the temples of Srirangam, Srivilliputtur and Alvar Tirunagari. Nammālvār’s Tiruvāymoliconsists of sets of is recited and interpreted over the course of the second half of the festival known as Irā-Pāṭṭu at all three temples, while the Tiruviruttam is performed during the first ten days known as Pakal Pāṭṭu. The second performance tradition is known as Kavi Pāṭṭu. It too is performed by a family of Brahmin men who claim descent from Maturakavi. The Kavi Pāṭṭu repertoire is unique to Alvar Tirunagari. It consists of sets of Maṇipravāḷa śleṣa prose poems that are known as ‘Perumāḷ Kavi’, ‘Ālvār Kavi’ and ‘Tinappaṭi Kavi’. Lines from the Tiruviruttam are interwoven into these kavis, with particular emphasis placed on the line jñāna-p-pirān allāl illai (there is no one but the master of knowledge) from Tiruviruttam 99. This kavi is performed before the Nammālvār sannidhi as part of the morning nitya utsavam at the Alvar Tirunagari temple. The kavis are also referred to as viṇṇappam (petition). See Venkatesan, ‘The Poet’s Song’ (forthcoming).

  149. See Appendix 2 (Index of Motifs) for a list of Tiruviruttam verses that focus on Viṣṇu’s eyes.

  Glossary

  Words are marked with* to indicate a cross-reference

  Adhyayanotsavam: The Annual Festival of Recitation that takes place in the Tamil month of Mārkali*

  Aiṅkurunūru: A classical Tamil anthology of five hundred short love poems dated to the third century

  Akam: Literally, interior/inner. It refers to the category of Tamil classical poems that deal with love and domestic affairs.

  Akapporuḷ: Poems which contain akam content

  Alaṅkāra: Ornamentation, decoration

  Aṁśa: An emanation of Viṣṇu

  Antāti: a poetic form where the end syllables or words of a verse are repeated as the first syllables or words of the verse that immediately follows it

  Anril: A bird that is often used in Tamil love poetry to evoke steadfastness

  Anubhava: Enjoyment

  Anubhava grantha: A text of enjoyment. Śrīvaiṣṇavas* use it to refer to commentary.

  Anyāpadeśa: The outer or exoteric meaning of a text

  Araiyar Cēvai: A hereditary ritual tradition associated with the Nālāyira Divya Prabandham*

  Aran: Śiva

  Aruḷ: Grace, mercy, compassion

  Asura: The natural enemies of the gods (sura), often translated into English as demons

  Avatāra: Descent. Refers to the ten descents/interventions of Viṣṇu

  Ayan: Brahmā

  Ācārya: Teacher

  Ācārya Hṛdayam: Literally, the heart of the teacher. A Maṇipravāḷa synthesis of the meaning of the Tiruvāymoli*

  Ālvār: Literally, the one who drowns, one who is immersed, coming from the Tamil root āl—to drown/to be immersed. The twelve poet-saints of the Śrīvaiṣṇava tradition whose compositions comprise the Nālāyira Divya Prabandham*

  Āmpal: A water lily

  Āṇṭāḷ: The sole female ālvār* poet. She authored two poems, the Tiruppāvai* and the Nācciyār Tirumoli*

  Ātman: The eternal undying self

  Bāṇa: A thousand-armed asura* and devotee of Śiva who was vanquished by Kṛṣṇa

  Bhāgavatas: Devotees of Viṣṇu

  Bhāgavata Purāṇa: One of the most important Purāṇas extolling the virtues of Viṣṇu. It contains eighteen books. The tenth book, which is the longest, is concerned with Kṛṣṇa’s exploits.

  Bhū: The goddess earth. She is considered Viṣṇu’s secondary consort.

  Caṅkam: Literally, academy. It refers to the corpus of Tamil literary works composed between the first and third centuries CE.

  Cilappatikāram: A Jain Tamil epic composed by Ilaṅkō Aṭikaḷ dated to between the fifth and sixth centuries CE

  Cirrinpam: Worldly pleasures

  Cūrṇikai: Sutra, short aphoristic statement. Refers to the individual verses from the Ācārya Hṛdayam*

  Devagānam: Divine music. Refers to Srirama Bharati’s reimagined Araiyar Cēvai

  Divyasūricaritam: A fifteenth-century Sanskrit hagiography of the Śrīvaiṣṇava ālvār* and ācārya*

  Gopī: Cowherd maidens

  Guruparamparaprabhāvam: Maṇipravāḷa* hagiographies of the Śrīvaiṣṇava ālvār* and ācārya.* There are two major versions of the text known as the 6000 and 3000.

  Kṛṣṇa: The ninth avatāra* of Viṣṇu

  Iyarpā: A section of the Nālāyira Divya Prabandham* that contains many of the experimental works

  Jñāna/Jñānam: Knowledge/wisdom

  Kavi Pāṭṭu: A kind of ritual singing specific to Alvar Tirunagari

  Kayal: A freshwater fish native to Tamil country

  Kālamayakkam: Literally, the bewilderment of the seasons. It generally refers to a deliberate misapprehension of the signs of the approaching rainy season.

  Kāma: The god of love

  Keṇṭai: A freshwater fish native to Tamil country

  Kiḷavi-t-talaivan: The hero of the poem/the moment(s)

  Konrai: Indian laburnum

  Kōvai: A genre of Tamil poetry. It usually contains four hundred verses, and is concerned with depicting all the stages of love, beginning with the first meeting and concluding with life after marriage

  Kurukūr: The town identified with present-day Alvar Tirunagari in Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu

  Kurai: Lack

  Kuvaḷai: Blue water lily

  Kūrattālvān: Rāmānuja’s* scribe and disciple

  Lakṣmī: Viṣṇu’s primary consort. She is the goddess of wealth, fortune and auspiciousness.

  Līlā vibhūti: The realm of play. It refers to the terrestrial world.

  Mahābali: The demon king vanquished by Viṣṇu in his Vāmana-Trivikrama form

  Maṇipravāḷa: Literally, gems and corals. It refers to a commentarial language used by the Śrīvaiṣṇavas.* It uses specialized Sanskrit vocabulary with Tamil grammar.

  Maturakavi: The disciple of Nammālvār*

  Māṇikkavācakar: A ninth-century Śaiva poet

  Mārkali: The Tamil month that falls between mid-December and mid-January

  Māran: A name or epithet of Nammālvār*

  Māruta: A type of cool breeze

  Meru: The mountain that is the cosmic axis mundi

  Mokṣa: Release from the endless cycle of birth and death

  Murukan: The Tamil god of love and war. He is the son of Śiva.

  Naraka: An asura* who kidnapped several women and was eventually killed by Kṛṣṇa

  Nācciyār Tirumoli: A poem of 143 verses composed by Āṇṭāḷ*

  Nālāyira Divya Prabandham (also, Divya Prabandham): A collection of four thousand verses composed by the twelve ālvār* poets

  Nammālvār: The most important of the ālvār* poets

  Nāthamuni: The first teacher of the Śrīvaiṣṇava* community. He is believed to have collected and compiled the Divya Prabandham.*

  Nāyaka(n): (Sanskrit) Hero

  Nāyikā: (Sanskrit) Heroine

  Neytal: Indian water lily

  Nityasūri: Eternal being

  Nitya vibhūti: Eternal realm. Refers to Vaikuṇṭha*

  Oppu: Comparison

  Paṇ: An ancient Tamil musical mode

  Parāṅkuśa Nāyikā: Nammālvār’s* female persona

  Pāṭṭuṭai-t-talaivan: The hero of the composition/patron

  Periyālvār: An important ālvār,* who is related to Āṇṭāḷ*

  Periyavāccān Piḷḷai: A twel
fth-century commentator on the Nālāyira Divya Prabandham*

  Pērinpam: The higher pleasure, that is, divine bliss

  Pēy: One of the first three ālvār*

  Phala śruti: The concluding verse of a poem detailing the merits to be accrued from learning, memorizing or reciting it

  Poykai: One of the first three ālvār*

  Puram: Literally, exterior/outer. It refers to the category of Tamil classical poems that deals with kings, war and ethics.

  Puranānuru: A Tamil literary anthology of four hundred verses from the classical period that concerns war and ethics

  Pūtam: One of the first three ālvār*

  Rāga: A melodic mode

  Rāmānuja: The most important of the teachers of the Śrivaiṣṇava* community. The traditional dates are 1017–1137 CE.

  Rāmānuja Nūrrantāti: A text in praise of Rāmānuja

  Ṛg Veda: The oldest of the four Vedas. Considered to be revealed or śruti (heard)

  Saṁpradāya: Tradition, lineage

  Saṁsāra: The endless cycle of birth and death

  Saṁśleṣa: Union

  Śaṭhakōpan: One of Nammālvār’s* names

  Śleṣa: A literary device that allows you to say many things at once. Yigal Bronner refers to it as ‘simultaneous narration’.

  Śrī: Another name for Lakṣmī, the primary consort of Viṣṇu

  Śrīvaiṣṇava: A sect that reveres the ālvārs* and cleaves to the philosophy laid out by Rāmānuja*

  Svāpadeśa: The inner/esoteric meaning

  Talaivan: (Tamil) Hero

  Talaivi: (Tamil) Heroine

  Tāla: Rhythm

  Tēvāram: The Śaiva collection of poems attributed to the three saints Appar, Campantar and Cuntarar

  Tillai: The sacred site of Chidambaram and home to Śiva as Naṭarāja, the king of dance

  Tiṇai: Landscapes. It refers to a Tamil poetic system. There are five tiṇais, each of which is associated with a specific moment in the development of love. These are kuriñci, neytal, pālai, mullai and marutam.

  Tirukkōvaiyār: The four-hundred-verse poem in the kōvai* genre composed by Māṇikkavācakar*

  Tirumaṅkai: One of the most important ālvār* poets with an impressive contribution of poems to the Divya Prabandham*

  Tirumoli: A type of song favoured by the ālvār* poets

  Tiruppāvai: The Sacred Vow. Āṇṭāḷ’s* composition of thirty verses in praise of Kṛṣṇa

  Tiruvācakam: Literally, sacred speech. Māṇikkavācakar’s* monumental work in praise of Śiva

  Tiruvāymoli: Literally, sacred truth. Nammālvār’s* 1102-verse composition. The Śrīvaiṣṇavas regarded it as revealed.

  Tolkāppiyam: A Tamil grammar which has several layers. The earliest strata of the text is generally dated to the pre-Christian era (c. 150 BCE) with the upper limit for the text’s composition placed at 500 CE.

  Tōli: (Tamil) The female friend

  Tulāy/Tulasī: Sacred basil

  Vaikuṇṭha: Viṣṇu’s heaven

  Vedānta Deśika: One of the most important teachers, poets and philosophers of the Śrīvaiṣṇava* community. He composed in Sanskrit, Tamil and Prakrit. He lived between 1269 and 1370 CE. His work and philosophical orientation comes to be associated with the northern or Vaṭakalai branch of the Śrīvaiṣṇavas.

  Vēlan: The priest of Murukan.* In Caṅkam poems he is often painted as an ineffectual figure who misdiagnoses the heroine’s lovesickness as possession by Murukan.

  Vēḷḷāḷa: An agricultural caste group

  Viṇṇappam: Petition, plea or request

  Vinai: Deeds or actions

  Viruttam: A specific metrical form

  Viśleṣa: Separation

  Viśvaksena: Viṣṇu’s commander-in-chief/guard

  Bibliography

  Primary Sources

  Aṇṇaṅkarācarya, P.B. Ālvārkal Talaivarāna Nammālvār Aruḷicceyta Mutar Pirapāntamakiya Tiruviruttam. Chennai: Māṭal Accukkūṭam, 1930.

  Annapukal Muṭumpai Alakiya Maṇavāḷa Perumāḷ Nāyanār Aruḷicceyta. Ācārya Hṛdayam. Madras: Madras Rattinam Press, 1950.

  Divyasūricaritam. Garuḍavāhana Paṇḍita. Sanskrit text. Eds. T.A. Sampath Kumaracharya and K.K.A. Venkatachari. Bombay: Ananthacharya Research Institute, 1978.

  Guruparamparaprabhāvam 6000. Maṇipravāḷa text. Eds. Srinivasa Appankarswami et al. Chennai: Ganesh Publications. Publication date unavailable.

  Guruparamparaprābhavam 3000. Maṇipravāḷa text. Tiruvallikkēni: Sri Vanibhusanam Publishers, 1913.

  Nālāyira Divya Prabandham. Tamil text. Ed. P.B. Aṇṇaṅkarācarya. Kanci: Aṇṇaṅkarācarya Institute, 1972.

  Nālāyira Divya Prabandham. Tamil text. Ed. Krishnaswami Iyengar. Trichy: Srinivasa Press. Publication date unavailable.

  Periyavāccan Piḷḷai. Tiruviruttam Vyākhyānam. Kodambakkam, Chennai: Sri Vaishava Sri, 1994.

  Rāmānujāccāryār Caṭakōpa U.Vē Vai Mu. Prapantajanakūṭastar Śrī Nammālvār Tiruvāy Malarntaruḷiya Tiruviruttam Urai. 3rd edn. Chennai: Sri Vaishnava Sri, 1994.

  Vīrarāghavācarya, Uttamūr T. Ubhaya Vedānta Granthamālai: Nammālvār Aruḷicceyta Tiruviruttam, Tiruvāciriyam, Periya Tiruvantāti. Madras: Visishtadvaita Pracharini Sabha, 1954.

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  Bronner, Yigal. Extreme Poetry: The South Asian Movement of Simultaneous Narration. New York: Oxford University Press, 2010.

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  Carman, John and Vasudha Narayanan. The Tamil Veda: Piḷḷān’s Interpretation of the Tiruvāymoli. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1989.

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  —————. No One Cries for the Dead: Tamil Dirges, Rowdy Songs and Graveyard Petitions. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005.

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  —————. ‘Nammālvār’s Glorious Tiruvallavāl: An Exploration in the Methods and Goals of Śrīvaiṣṇava Commentary.’ Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 111, No. 2 (April–June 1991), pp. 260–76.

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