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Laxmi Prasad Devkota

Laxmi Prasad Devkota (Nepali: लक्ष्मीप्रसाद देवकोटा) (1909-1959) was a Nepali poet, playwright, novelist, and politician. Honored with the title of Mahakabi (Nepali: महाकवि, lit.'Greatest poet') in Nepali literature, he was known as a poet with a golden heart.[3] He is considered to be one of the greatest and most famous literary figures in Nepal.[4] Some of his popular works include the best-selling Muna Madan, along with Sulochana, Kunjini, Bhikhari, and Shakuntala.[5]

Mahakavi
Laxmi Prasad Devkota
लक्ष्मीप्रसाद देवकोटा
Minister of Education and Autonomy
In office
26 July 1957 – 15 May 1958
MonarchKing Mahendra
Prime MinisterKunwar Inderjit Singh
Personal details
Born(1909-11-13)13 November 1909
Dhobidhara, Kathmandu, Nepal
Died14 September 1959(1959-09-14) (aged 49)
Pashupati Aryaghat
NationalityNepali
SpouseMandevi Chalise[1]
Children5 daughters and 4 sons[2]
Parent(s)Tilmadhav Devkota (father)
Amar Rajya Lakshmi Devi (mother)
RelativesLok Priya Devi (sister)[2]
OccupationPoet, Playwright and Scholar

Early life edit

Devkota was born on the night of Lakshmi Puja on 13 November 1909 (27 Kartik 1966 BS) to father Teel Madhav Devkota and mother Amar Rajya Lakshmi Devi in Dhobidhara, Kathmandu.[6][7] His father was a Sanskrit scholar, so he attained his basic education under the custodianship of his father. He started his formal education at Durbar High School, where he studied both Sanskrit grammar and English.[8] After finishing his matriculation exams from Patna at the age of 17, he pursued a Bachelor of Arts along with a Bachelor of Laws at Tri-Chandra College and graduated from Patna University as a private examinee. His desire to complete his master's degree was left incomplete due to his family's financial conditions.[4]

Only after a decade from his graduation as a lawyer, he started working in the Nepal Bhasaanuwad Parishad (Publication Censor Board), where he met famous playwright Balkrishna Sama. At the same time, he also worked as a lecturer at Tri-Chandra College and Padma Kanya College.[8]

 
A photo of Devkota smoking (2013 BS (1956-1957))

Literary career edit

Devkota contributed to Nepali literature by starting a modern Nepali language romantic movement in the country. He was the second writer born in Nepal to begin writing epic poems in Nepali literature. Nepali poetry soared to new heights with Devkota's innovative use of the language.

Departing from the Sanskrit tradition that dominated the Nepali literary scene at the time, and being inspired by the Newar language ballad song Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni, he wrote Muna Madan (Nepali: मुनामदन) (1930), a long narrative poem in a popular Jhyaure bhaka (Nepali: झ्याउरे भाका) folk tune. Muna Madan is undoubtedly the best-selling book in the history of Nepali literature. The 2003 film Muna Madan, which was Nepal's official entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 76th Academy Awards, was based on this poem.[9] The work received immediate recognition from the Ranasthe country's ministers at the time. Muna Madan tells the story of Madan, a traveling merchant, who departs for Tibet in a bid to earn some money leaving behind his wife, Muna. The poem describes the thematic hardships of the journey: the grief of separation, the itching of longing, and the torment of death.[10]

The ballad Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni is a tragic song based on a Newa merchant, his mother, and his wife. The merchant is about to leave Kathmandu for Tibet on a work. The song starts with the wife pleading with her mother-in-law to stop him, saying that it's not even been a month since she came to their home and he wants to go away. Being raised in Kathmandu, Devkota had heard this song from locals singing it at a local Pati (Nepali: पाटी or फ़ल्चा). He was highly fascinated by the song and decided to re-write it in Nepali. Since the Rana rulers had put a ban on the Newa trade, language and literature, he changed the main character from a Newa merchant as in the original song to a Kshatriya (warrior class) character. Although Kshatriya people did not practice trade for their living during those days, he had to depict it as such in order to lure the Rana rulers.[5]

The following couplet, which is among the most famous and frequently quoted lines from the epic, celebrates the triumph of humanity and compassion over the hierarchies created by caste in Nepalese culture.

Considered his magnum opus, Muna Madan has remained widely popular among the lay readers of Nepali literature; it remains the most popular Nepali book since 1936;[11] the book was also translated into Mandarin; it was well received by China and considered successful.[12]

Devkota, inspired by his five-month stay in a mental asylum in 1939, wrote a free-verse poem, Pagal (Nepali: पागल, lit.'The Lunatic'). The poem deals with his usual mental ability and is considered one of the best Nepali language poems.[13][14]

 
Laxmi Prasad Devkota

Devkota had the ability to compose long epics and poems with literary complexity and philosophical density in very short periods of time. He wrote Shakuntala, his first epic poem, and also the first Mahakavya (Nepali: महाकाव्य) written in the Nepali language, in a mere three months. Published in 1945, Shakuntala is a voluminous work in 24 cantos based on Kālidāsa's famous Sanskrit play Abhijñānaśākuntalam. Shakuntala demonstrates Devkota's mastery of Sanskrit meter and diction, which he incorporated heavily while working primarily in Nepali. According to the late scholar and translator of Devkota, David Rubin, Shakuntala is among his greatest accomplishments. "It is, without doubt, a remarkable work, a masterpiece of a particular kind, harmonizing various elements of a classical tradition with a modern point of view, a pastoral with a cosmic allegory, Kālidāsa's romantic comedy of earthly love with a symbolic structure that points to redemption through the coinciding of sensual and sacred love."[15]

Devkota also published several collections of short lyric poems set in various traditional and non-traditional forms and meters. Most of his poetry shows the influence of English Romantic poets like Wordsworth and Coleridge. The title poem in the collection Bhikhari (Nepali: भिखारी, lit.'Beggar') is reminiscent of Wordsworth's "The Old Cumberland Beggar". In this poem, Devkota describes the beggar going about his ways in dire poverty and desolation, deprived of human love and material comforts. On the other hand, the beggar is also seen as the source of compassion placed at the core of suffering and destitution. Devkota connects the beggar with the divine as the ultimate fount of kindness and empathy:

 
Devkota (right) with poet Madhav Prasad Ghimire

Many of his poems focus on mundane elements of the human and the natural world. The titles of his poems like Ban (Nepali: वन, lit.'The Woods'), Kisaan (Nepali: किसान, lit.'The Peasant'), Baadal (Nepali: बादल, lit.'Clouds') shows that he sought his poetic inspiration in the commonplace and proximal aspects of the world. What resonates throughout most of his poetry is his profound faith in humanity. For instance, in the poem Ban, the speaker goes through a series of interrogations, rejecting all forms of comfort and solace that could be offered solely to him as an individual. Instead, he embraces his responsibility and concern for his fellow beings. The poem ends with the following quatrain that highlights the speaker's humanistic inclinations:

Besides poetry, Devkota also made significant contributions to the essay genre. He is considered the father of modern Nepali essay writing. He defied the conventional form of essays and broke the traditional rules of essay writing and embraced a more fluid and colloquial style which had more clarity in meaning, expressive in feelings, and eloquent in terms of language. His essays are generally satirical in tone and are characterized by their trenchant humour and ruthless criticism of the modernizing influences from the West on Nepali society. An essay titled Bhaladmi (Nepali: भलादमी, lit.'Gentleman') or criticizes a decadent trend in Nepali society to respect people based on their outward appearances and outfit rather than their actual inner worth and personality. In another essay titled Ke Nepal Sano Cha? (Nepali: के नेपाल सानो छ?, lit.'Is Nepal is small'), he expresses deeply nationalistic sentiments inveighing against the colonial forces from British India which, he felt, were encroaching all aspects of Nepali culture.[16] His essays are published in an essays book entitled Laxmi Nibhandha Sanghraha (Nepali: लक्ष्मी निबन्धसङ्‌ग्रह).[5]

Devkota also translated William Shakespeare's play Hamlet into Nepali.[17] Moreover, he translated his own epic, Shakuntala, into English and wrote several poetry, essays, plays, and epics in English.[18]

Politics edit

 
Commemorative stamp of Devkota (1965)

Laxmi Prasad Devkota was not active within any well-established political party, but his poetry consistently embodied an attitude of rebellion against the oppressive Rana dynasty. During his self-exile in Varanasi, he started working as an editor of Yugvani newspaper of the Nepali Congress, leading to the confiscation of all his property in Nepal by the Rana Government. After the introduction of democracy through Revolution of 1951, Devkota was appointed member of the Nepal Salahkar Samiti (Nepali: नेपाल सलाहकार समिति, lit.'Nepal Advisory Committee') in 1952 by King Tribhuvan. Later in 1957, he was appointed as Minister of Education and Autonomous Governance under the premiership of Kunwar Inderjit Singh.[19][20]

Personal life edit

Devkota's son, Padma Devkota, is also a poet and writer and served for many years as a professor at the English Department, Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu.[21]

Health edit

In the late 1930s, Devkota suffered from nervous breakdowns, probably due to the deaths of his parents and his two-month old daughter. Eventually, in 1939, he was admitted to the Mental Asylum of Ranchi, India, for five months.[20] With financial debts later in his life and being unable to finance the weddings and dowries of his daughters. He is once reported to have said to his wife, "Tonight let's abandon the children to the care of society and youth and renounce this world at bedtime and take potassium cyanide or morphine or something like that [sic]."[22]

Later years and death edit

Laxmi Prasad Devkota was a chain smoker throughout his life. After a long battle with cancer, Devkota died on 14 September 1959, at Pashupati Aryaghat, along the banks of Bagmati river in Pashupatinath Temple, Kathmandu. Prior to his death, Devkota's income was terminated by the Nepal Academy of Literature and Art because he attended the Afro-Asian Writers' Conference, which was held in modern-day Tashkent, without first seeking permission from them.[19] He also spoke at the ceremony, praising well-known figures for their contributions to Nepali literature, including Bhanubhakta Acharya, Lekhnath Paudyal, Pandit Hemraj, and Somnath Sigdel.[23][24] Devkota claimed in an interview that he hadn't received pay for the previous eight months and that as a result, he had been unable to purchase the medication he needed to treat his disease; moreover, he was struggling to even buy food. Devkota's personality was vibrant and assertive despite the fact that he was battling cancer, but his room was disorganized.[19]

Publications edit

Epics edit

Epics of Laxmi Prasad Devkota
Title Year of first
publication
First edition publisher
(Kathmandu, unless otherwise stated)
Notes Ref.
Shakuntala 1945 Sajha Epic
Sulochana 2002 Epic
Bana Kusum Epic
Maharana Pratap Epic
Prithviraj Chauhan 1992-1993 Epic
Prometheus Epic

Poetry / short novels / essays / novel edit

Poetry / Short Novels / Essays of Laxmi Prasad Devkota
Title Year of first
publication
First edition publisher
(Kathmandu, unless otherwise stated)
Notes Ref.
Like Strength (बल जस्तो)
The Beggar - Poetry Collection (भिखारी - कवितासंग्रह)
Gaine's Song (गाइने गीत) Poetry
Butterfly - Children's Poetry Collection (पुतली - बालकवितासंग्रह ) Poetry
Golden Morning - Children's Poem (सुनको बिहान - बालकविता) Poetry
Pagal (पागल) poetry
Farmer - Musical Play (कृषिवाला - गीतिनाटक) Verse Drama
Meeting of Dushyant and Shakantula (दुष्यन्त-शकुन्तला भेट) Short Epic
Muna Madan (मुनामदन) Short Epic
Duel between Raavan and Jatayu (रावण-जटायु युद्ध) Short Epic
Kunjini (कुञ्जिनी) Short Epic
Luni (लुनी) Short Epic
Prince Prabhakar (राजकुमार प्रभाकर) Short Epic
Kidnapping of Sita (सीताहरण) Short Epic
Mahendu (म्हेन्दु) Short Epic
Dhumraketu Short Epic
Laxmi Essay Collection (लक्ष्मी निबन्धसङ्‌ग्रह) Essay
Champa (चम्पा) Novel
The Sleeping Porter (सोता हुआ कुली) Poetry
The Witch Doctor and Other Essays 2017 Sangri~La Books Essays (English)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Shrestha 1981, p. 117.
  2. ^ a b Shrestha 1981, p. 5.
  3. ^ गिरी, अमर (30 October 2019). "देवकोटा र मानवता: कुन मन्दिरमा जान्छौ यात्री ?". Gorkhapatra (in Nepali). from the original on 5 November 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  4. ^ a b Lamsal, Yuba Nath (6 December 2013). . Gorkhapatra. Archived from the original on 6 December 2013. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Hutt, Michael (7 March 2018). "A voice from the past speaking to the present". Kathmandu: The Record Nepal. from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  6. ^ पराजुली, गोपाल (27 July 2022). . Gorkhapatra (in Nepali). Archived from the original on 6 December 2013. Retrieved 27 July 2022. Being born on the auspicious day of Laxmi pooja (the goddess of wealth), he was regarded as the gift of goddess Laxmi, but in contradiction to it, he became a gift of Saraswati (goddess of knowledge and education).
  7. ^ Sharma, Kumar (23 October 2014). "Mahakavi Devkota: The legend lives on". The Kathmandu Post. from the original on 28 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  8. ^ a b Hutt 1991, p. 40.
  9. ^ Chi, Minnie (23 January 2004). "Nepal's Submission for Best Foreign Language Film (Academy Award)". University of California, Los Angeles. from the original on 2 June 2020. Retrieved 29 July 2022.
  10. ^ गौतम, प्रभाकर (29 June 2019). "नेवारी गीतिकाव्य 'जि वया ला लछि मदुनी' बाट प्रभावित थियो देवकोटाको मुनामदन". Setopati (in Nepali). from the original on 28 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  11. ^ Acharya, Tulasi (16 April 2022). "The Nepali literary environment". The Kathmandu Post. from the original on 17 April 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  12. ^ Mahat, Sunny (4 January 2019). "'Muna Madan' in Mandarin". The Annapurna Express. from the original on 9 May 2022. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  13. ^ Hutt 1991, pp. 53–56.
  14. ^ Thapa, Manjushree (11 October 2002). "Poetry for a derainged time". Nepali Times. from the original on 15 November 2020. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  15. ^ Devkota 1980, p. 40.
  16. ^ Panta, Pradipna Raj (29 October 2021). "Nepal Through Eyes Of Devkota". The Rising Nepal. Gorkhapatra Corporation. from the original on 20 November 2021. Retrieved 29 July 2022.
  17. ^ Trivedi, Chakravarti & Motohashi 2021, p. 102.
  18. ^ Chalise, Vijaya (27 October 2008). "Devkota birth centenary Who cares for this national genius?". The Himalayan Times. from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  19. ^ a b c रिसाल, भैरव (27 October 2019). "महाकविसँगको त्यो अन्तर्वार्ता". Himal Khabarpatrika (in Nepali). from the original on 24 February 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2022. कुराकानीमा देवकोटाले आठ महीनादेखि हातमा रातो पैसो नपरेकोले ओखती त कता-कता चुल्होमा आगो बल्न पनि मुश्किल भएको वेदना साट्नुभयो । म त्यहाँ डेढ घण्टा जति बसें हुँला । क्यान्सर जस्तो रोगबाट ग्रसित भए पनि महाकविको व्यक्तित्वमा तेज र ओज थियो । तर कोठा भने असरल्ल, सामान भद्रगोल ।
  20. ^ a b उप्रेती, अरुणा (6 September 2020). "दुई किताब : देवकोटाको जीवनशैली, सिकाइ र सहयोग". Online Khabar (in Nepali). from the original on 6 September 2020. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  21. ^ "A Concocted Emotion Is not Poetry: Padma Devkota". The Gorkha Times. 1 February 2022. from the original on 3 August 2022. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  22. ^ Pandey 1959, p. 30.
  23. ^ देवकोटा, लक्ष्मीप्रसाद (14 November 2020). "महाकविको 'इच्छापत्र'". Himal Khabarpatrika (in Nepali). from the original on 6 April 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  24. ^ Chauhan 2009, pp. 99–105.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Mahakavi Laxmi Prasad Devkota Study and Research Center 10 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Some Works by Laxmi Prasad Devkota in original Nepali
  • Poems Of Laxmi Prasad Devkota In Nepali (From Laxmi Kavita Sangraha) Compiled By Sanjaal Corps
  • Laxmi Prasad Devkota: Nepal's Greatest Poet 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine

laxmi, prasad, devkota, nepali, लक, रस, वक, 1909, 1959, nepali, poet, playwright, novelist, politician, honored, with, title, mahakabi, nepali, मह, कव, greatest, poet, nepali, literature, known, poet, with, golden, heart, considered, greatest, most, famous, li. Laxmi Prasad Devkota Nepali लक ष म प रस द द वक ट 1909 1959 was a Nepali poet playwright novelist and politician Honored with the title of Mahakabi Nepali मह कव lit Greatest poet in Nepali literature he was known as a poet with a golden heart 3 He is considered to be one of the greatest and most famous literary figures in Nepal 4 Some of his popular works include the best selling Muna Madan along with Sulochana Kunjini Bhikhari and Shakuntala 5 MahakaviLaxmi Prasad Devkotaलक ष म प रस द द वक ट Minister of Education and AutonomyIn office 26 July 1957 15 May 1958MonarchKing MahendraPrime MinisterKunwar Inderjit SinghPersonal detailsBorn 1909 11 13 13 November 1909Dhobidhara Kathmandu NepalDied14 September 1959 1959 09 14 aged 49 Pashupati AryaghatNationalityNepaliSpouseMandevi Chalise 1 Children5 daughters and 4 sons 2 Parent s Tilmadhav Devkota father Amar Rajya Lakshmi Devi mother RelativesLok Priya Devi sister 2 OccupationPoet Playwright and Scholar Contents 1 Early life 2 Literary career 3 Politics 4 Personal life 4 1 Health 5 Later years and death 6 Publications 6 1 Epics 6 2 Poetry short novels essays novel 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life editDevkota was born on the night of Lakshmi Puja on 13 November 1909 27 Kartik 1966 BS to father Teel Madhav Devkota and mother Amar Rajya Lakshmi Devi in Dhobidhara Kathmandu 6 7 His father was a Sanskrit scholar so he attained his basic education under the custodianship of his father He started his formal education at Durbar High School where he studied both Sanskrit grammar and English 8 After finishing his matriculation exams from Patna at the age of 17 he pursued a Bachelor of Arts along with a Bachelor of Laws at Tri Chandra College and graduated from Patna University as a private examinee His desire to complete his master s degree was left incomplete due to his family s financial conditions 4 Only after a decade from his graduation as a lawyer he started working in the Nepal Bhasaanuwad Parishad Publication Censor Board where he met famous playwright Balkrishna Sama At the same time he also worked as a lecturer at Tri Chandra College and Padma Kanya College 8 nbsp A photo of Devkota smoking 2013 BS 1956 1957 Literary career editDevkota contributed to Nepali literature by starting a modern Nepali language romantic movement in the country He was the second writer born in Nepal to begin writing epic poems in Nepali literature Nepali poetry soared to new heights with Devkota s innovative use of the language Departing from the Sanskrit tradition that dominated the Nepali literary scene at the time and being inspired by the Newar language ballad song Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni he wrote Muna Madan Nepali म न मदन 1930 a long narrative poem in a popular Jhyaure bhaka Nepali झ य उर भ क folk tune Muna Madan is undoubtedly the best selling book in the history of Nepali literature The 2003 film Muna Madan which was Nepal s official entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 76th Academy Awards was based on this poem 9 The work received immediate recognition from the Ranas the country s ministers at the time Muna Madan tells the story of Madan a traveling merchant who departs for Tibet in a bid to earn some money leaving behind his wife Muna The poem describes the thematic hardships of the journey the grief of separation the itching of longing and the torment of death 10 The ballad Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni is a tragic song based on a Newa merchant his mother and his wife The merchant is about to leave Kathmandu for Tibet on a work The song starts with the wife pleading with her mother in law to stop him saying that it s not even been a month since she came to their home and he wants to go away Being raised in Kathmandu Devkota had heard this song from locals singing it at a local Pati Nepali प ट or फ ल च He was highly fascinated by the song and decided to re write it in Nepali Since the Rana rulers had put a ban on the Newa trade language and literature he changed the main character from a Newa merchant as in the original song to a Kshatriya warrior class character Although Kshatriya people did not practice trade for their living during those days he had to depict it as such in order to lure the Rana rulers 5 The following couplet which is among the most famous and frequently quoted lines from the epic celebrates the triumph of humanity and compassion over the hierarchies created by caste in Nepalese culture क ष त र क छ र य प उ छ न छ घ नल छ द न म न स ठ ल द लल ह न छ ज तल ह द न The son of a Kshatriya touches your feet not with hatred but with love A man s greatness is determined by his heart not by his caste or lineage Considered his magnum opus Muna Madan has remained widely popular among the lay readers of Nepali literature it remains the most popular Nepali book since 1936 11 the book was also translated into Mandarin it was well received by China and considered successful 12 Devkota inspired by his five month stay in a mental asylum in 1939 wrote a free verse poem Pagal Nepali प गल lit The Lunatic The poem deals with his usual mental ability and is considered one of the best Nepali language poems 13 14 जर र स थ म प गल यस त छ म र ह ल म शब दल ई द ख दछ द श यल ई स न दछ ब सन ल ई स ब द ल न छ आक शभन द प त लक क र ल ई छ न छ त क र जसक अस त त व ल क म न द न जसक आक र स स र ज न द न Surely my friend I am mad That s exactly what I am I see a word Hear sights Taste smells I touch things thinner than air Those things Whose existence the world denies Whose shapes the world does not know nbsp Laxmi Prasad DevkotaDevkota had the ability to compose long epics and poems with literary complexity and philosophical density in very short periods of time He wrote Shakuntala his first epic poem and also the first Mahakavya Nepali मह क व य written in the Nepali language in a mere three months Published in 1945 Shakuntala is a voluminous work in 24 cantos based on Kalidasa s famous Sanskrit play Abhijnanasakuntalam Shakuntala demonstrates Devkota s mastery of Sanskrit meter and diction which he incorporated heavily while working primarily in Nepali According to the late scholar and translator of Devkota David Rubin Shakuntala is among his greatest accomplishments It is without doubt a remarkable work a masterpiece of a particular kind harmonizing various elements of a classical tradition with a modern point of view a pastoral with a cosmic allegory Kalidasa s romantic comedy of earthly love with a symbolic structure that points to redemption through the coinciding of sensual and sacred love 15 Devkota also published several collections of short lyric poems set in various traditional and non traditional forms and meters Most of his poetry shows the influence of English Romantic poets like Wordsworth and Coleridge The title poem in the collection Bhikhari Nepali भ ख र lit Beggar is reminiscent of Wordsworth s The Old Cumberland Beggar In this poem Devkota describes the beggar going about his ways in dire poverty and desolation deprived of human love and material comforts On the other hand the beggar is also seen as the source of compassion placed at the core of suffering and destitution Devkota connects the beggar with the divine as the ultimate fount of kindness and empathy क ल ब दलब ट खस क अन धक रम भ त र पस क ईश वर ह क भ ख र ब ल दछ ईश वर ह दय घ स क घर घर आ गन च र ब ल दछ आर तध वन म ब ल दछ कर ण म त द ल भ र Fallen from the blackest clouds To enter into darker shrouds Is he deity or beggar Buddha speaks his words pierce the heart Wandering from house to house yard to yard Now speaking with a voice of pain His heart in sorrow cowed nbsp Devkota right with poet Madhav Prasad GhimireMany of his poems focus on mundane elements of the human and the natural world The titles of his poems like Ban Nepali वन lit The Woods Kisaan Nepali क स न lit The Peasant Baadal Nepali ब दल lit Clouds shows that he sought his poetic inspiration in the commonplace and proximal aspects of the world What resonates throughout most of his poetry is his profound faith in humanity For instance in the poem Ban the speaker goes through a series of interrogations rejecting all forms of comfort and solace that could be offered solely to him as an individual Instead he embraces his responsibility and concern for his fellow beings The poem ends with the following quatrain that highlights the speaker s humanistic inclinations द स त कह छन स थ छ क क घर ह त म र क न द श ज न छ क न प र भवन म स फ र ल य य क न सन द श द स त म र श भ उद य ग स थ छ स हस ब श व श व सब घर ह दय प र त र ल य उछ स व सन द श Where are your friends Who goes with you Which land is your home What place do you seek Traveller With what news do you roam My friend is decent diligence Courage comes with me The whole world is my home To heartland I roam with hues of humanity Besides poetry Devkota also made significant contributions to the essay genre He is considered the father of modern Nepali essay writing He defied the conventional form of essays and broke the traditional rules of essay writing and embraced a more fluid and colloquial style which had more clarity in meaning expressive in feelings and eloquent in terms of language His essays are generally satirical in tone and are characterized by their trenchant humour and ruthless criticism of the modernizing influences from the West on Nepali society An essay titled Bhaladmi Nepali भल दम lit Gentleman or criticizes a decadent trend in Nepali society to respect people based on their outward appearances and outfit rather than their actual inner worth and personality In another essay titled Ke Nepal Sano Cha Nepali क न प ल स न छ lit Is Nepal is small he expresses deeply nationalistic sentiments inveighing against the colonial forces from British India which he felt were encroaching all aspects of Nepali culture 16 His essays are published in an essays book entitled Laxmi Nibhandha Sanghraha Nepali लक ष म न बन धसङ ग रह 5 Devkota also translated William Shakespeare s play Hamlet into Nepali 17 Moreover he translated his own epic Shakuntala into English and wrote several poetry essays plays and epics in English 18 Politics edit nbsp Commemorative stamp of Devkota 1965 Laxmi Prasad Devkota was not active within any well established political party but his poetry consistently embodied an attitude of rebellion against the oppressive Rana dynasty During his self exile in Varanasi he started working as an editor of Yugvani newspaper of the Nepali Congress leading to the confiscation of all his property in Nepal by the Rana Government After the introduction of democracy through Revolution of 1951 Devkota was appointed member of the Nepal Salahkar Samiti Nepali न प ल सल हक र सम त lit Nepal Advisory Committee in 1952 by King Tribhuvan Later in 1957 he was appointed as Minister of Education and Autonomous Governance under the premiership of Kunwar Inderjit Singh 19 20 Personal life editDevkota s son Padma Devkota is also a poet and writer and served for many years as a professor at the English Department Tribhuvan University Kathmandu 21 Health edit In the late 1930s Devkota suffered from nervous breakdowns probably due to the deaths of his parents and his two month old daughter Eventually in 1939 he was admitted to the Mental Asylum of Ranchi India for five months 20 With financial debts later in his life and being unable to finance the weddings and dowries of his daughters He is once reported to have said to his wife Tonight let s abandon the children to the care of society and youth and renounce this world at bedtime and take potassium cyanide or morphine or something like that sic 22 Later years and death editLaxmi Prasad Devkota was a chain smoker throughout his life After a long battle with cancer Devkota died on 14 September 1959 at Pashupati Aryaghat along the banks of Bagmati river in Pashupatinath Temple Kathmandu Prior to his death Devkota s income was terminated by the Nepal Academy of Literature and Art because he attended the Afro Asian Writers Conference which was held in modern day Tashkent without first seeking permission from them 19 He also spoke at the ceremony praising well known figures for their contributions to Nepali literature including Bhanubhakta Acharya Lekhnath Paudyal Pandit Hemraj and Somnath Sigdel 23 24 Devkota claimed in an interview that he hadn t received pay for the previous eight months and that as a result he had been unable to purchase the medication he needed to treat his disease moreover he was struggling to even buy food Devkota s personality was vibrant and assertive despite the fact that he was battling cancer but his room was disorganized 19 Publications editEpics edit Epics of Laxmi Prasad Devkota Title Year of firstpublication First edition publisher Kathmandu unless otherwise stated Notes Ref Shakuntala 1945 Sajha EpicSulochana 2002 EpicBana Kusum EpicMaharana Pratap EpicPrithviraj Chauhan 1992 1993 EpicPrometheus EpicPoetry short novels essays novel edit Poetry Short Novels Essays of Laxmi Prasad Devkota Title Year of firstpublication First edition publisher Kathmandu unless otherwise stated Notes Ref Like Strength बल जस त The Beggar Poetry Collection भ ख र कव त स ग रह Gaine s Song ग इन ग त PoetryButterfly Children s Poetry Collection प तल ब लकव त स ग रह PoetryGolden Morning Children s Poem स नक ब ह न ब लकव त PoetryPagal प गल poetryFarmer Musical Play क ष व ल ग त न टक Verse DramaMeeting of Dushyant and Shakantula द ष यन त शक न तल भ ट Short EpicMuna Madan म न मदन Short EpicDuel between Raavan and Jatayu र वण जट य य द ध Short EpicKunjini क ञ ज न Short EpicLuni ल न Short EpicPrince Prabhakar र जक म र प रभ कर Short EpicKidnapping of Sita स त हरण Short EpicMahendu म ह न द Short EpicDhumraketu Short EpicLaxmi Essay Collection लक ष म न बन धसङ ग रह EssayChampa चम प NovelThe Sleeping Porter स त ह आ क ल PoetryThe Witch Doctor and Other Essays 2017 Sangri La Books Essays English See also editNepali literature Bhanubhakta Acharya Mahakavi DevkotaReferences edit Shrestha 1981 p 117 a b Shrestha 1981 p 5 ग र अमर 30 October 2019 द वक ट र म नवत क न मन द रम ज न छ य त र Gorkhapatra in Nepali Archived from the original on 5 November 2019 Retrieved 27 July 2022 a b Lamsal Yuba Nath 6 December 2013 Poet The Great Laxmi Prasad Devkota Gorkhapatra Archived from the original on 6 December 2013 Retrieved 6 December 2013 a b c Hutt Michael 7 March 2018 A voice from the past speaking to the present Kathmandu The Record Nepal Archived from the original on 24 February 2019 Retrieved 24 February 2019 पर ज ल ग प ल 27 July 2022 मह कव लक ष म प रस द द वक ट Gorkhapatra in Nepali Archived from the original on 6 December 2013 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Being born on the auspicious day of Laxmi pooja the goddess of wealth he was regarded as the gift of goddess Laxmi but in contradiction to it he became a gift of Saraswati goddess of knowledge and education Sharma Kumar 23 October 2014 Mahakavi Devkota The legend lives on The Kathmandu Post Archived from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 27 July 2022 a b Hutt 1991 p 40 Chi Minnie 23 January 2004 Nepal s Submission for Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award University of California Los Angeles Archived from the original on 2 June 2020 Retrieved 29 July 2022 ग तम प रभ कर 29 June 2019 न व र ग त क व य ज वय ल लछ मद न ब ट प रभ व त थ य द वक ट क म न मदन Setopati in Nepali Archived from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Acharya Tulasi 16 April 2022 The Nepali literary environment The Kathmandu Post Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Mahat Sunny 4 January 2019 Muna Madan in Mandarin The Annapurna Express Archived from the original on 9 May 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Hutt 1991 pp 53 56 Thapa Manjushree 11 October 2002 Poetry for a derainged time Nepali Times Archived from the original on 15 November 2020 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Devkota 1980 p 40 Panta Pradipna Raj 29 October 2021 Nepal Through Eyes Of Devkota The Rising Nepal Gorkhapatra Corporation Archived from the original on 20 November 2021 Retrieved 29 July 2022 Trivedi Chakravarti amp Motohashi 2021 p 102 Chalise Vijaya 27 October 2008 Devkota birth centenary Who cares for this national genius The Himalayan Times Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 31 July 2022 a b c र स ल भ रव 27 October 2019 मह कव स गक त य अन तर व र त Himal Khabarpatrika in Nepali Archived from the original on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2022 क र क न म द वक ट ल आठ मह न द ख ह तम र त प स नपर क ल ओखत त कत कत च ल ह म आग बल न पन म श क ल भएक व दन स ट न भय म त यह ड ढ घण ट जत बस ह ल क य न सर जस त र गब ट ग रस त भए पन मह कव क व यक त त वम त ज र ओज थ य तर क ठ भन असरल ल स म न भद रग ल a b उप र त अर ण 6 September 2020 द ई क त ब द वक ट क ज वनश ल स क इ र सहय ग Online Khabar in Nepali Archived from the original on 6 September 2020 Retrieved 27 July 2022 A Concocted Emotion Is not Poetry Padma Devkota The Gorkha Times 1 February 2022 Archived from the original on 3 August 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Pandey 1959 p 30 द वक ट लक ष म प रस द 14 November 2020 मह कव क इच छ पत र Himal Khabarpatrika in Nepali Archived from the original on 6 April 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Chauhan 2009 pp 99 105 Bibliography editShrestha Chandra Bahadur 1981 My Reminiscence of the Great Poet Laxmi Prasad Devkota Royal Nepal Academy Retrieved 25 July 2022 Hutt Michael James 1991 Lakshmiprasad Devkota 1909 1959 Himalayan voices an introduction to modern Nepali literature Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 91026 3 OCLC 43476642 Archived from the original on 21 November 2021 Devkota Laxmi Prasad 1980 Nepali visions Nepali dreams the poetry of Laxmiprasad Devkota Translated by David Rubin New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 05014 3 OCLC 5946334 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Trivedi Poonam Chakravarti Paromita Motohashi Ted 2021 Asian interventions in global Shakespeare all the world s his stage New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 21431 4 OCLC 1196839110 Retrieved 30 July 2022 Pandey Nityaraj 1959 मह कव द वक ट in Nepali Nepal Sajha Prakashan ISBN 9789993327929 OCLC 79647044 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Chauhan Janga B 2009 Bodhi An Interdisciplinary Journal Devkota in Russia 3 Kathmandu Nepal Kathmandu University ISSN 2091 0479 OCLC 644273013 Archived from the original on 3 June 2018 Retrieved 29 July 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Laxmi Prasad Devkota nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Laxmi Prasad Devkota Some Works by Laxmi Prasad Devkota Mahakavi Laxmi Prasad Devkota Study and Research Center Archived 10 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine Some Works by Laxmi Prasad Devkota in original Nepali Poems Of Laxmi Prasad Devkota In Nepali From Laxmi Kavita Sangraha Compiled By Sanjaal Corps Laxmi Prasad Devkota Nepal s Greatest Poet Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Portals nbsp Nepal nbsp Literature nbsp Poetry nbsp Art nbsp Writing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laxmi Prasad Devkota amp oldid 1209531304, 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