Page:The Sanskrit Drama.djvu/128

Rh 7. The Metres of the Dramas

It is characteristic of Bhāsa's close dependence on the epic that his dramas should show a far more frequent use of the Çloka, 436 out of 1,092 verses. No later writer save Bhavabhūti in his Rāma dramas approaches this frequency, which, it must be noted, is not confined to the epic plays, for the Svapnavāsavadattā has 26 Çlokas out of 57 verses. In some plays, it is true, such as the Madhyamavyāyoga or the Pañcarātra, long series of Çlokas suggest incomplete command of the dramatic art on Bhāsa's part, but his general preference is clearly an outcome of his desire for rapid movement and simplicity; it is the later love for elaborate descriptions that encourages the use of sonorous and complex metres. The Çlokas are remarkably regular in construction; the diiambus in the second Pāda is insisted on rigidly; the Vipulās are rare, the fourth is unknown, the second sporadic, the first twice as frequent as the third, and the prior foot is rarely The sparing use of the irregular forms is doubtless due to the comparatively small number of Çlokas used consecutively, which minimises the desire for change of form.

Of the more elaborate metres, in which each syllable has a fixed length, the favourite is the Vasantatilaka, which occurs 179 times, while the Upajāti occurs 121 times. Next comes the Çārdūlavikrīḍita (92), Mālinī (72), Puṣpitāgrā with the scheme -0--|uuu --- (66), Vaṅçasthā (35), Çālinī (2), Çikharinī (19), and Praharṣiṇī (17). Other metres are purely sporadic; they include the Sragdharā, Hariṇī, Vaiçvadevī, Drutavilambita, Pṛthvī, and Bhujan̄gaprayāta, while the Suvadanā occurs four times. There is one example of the Upagīti with 12 morae in the first and third Pādas, and 15 in the second and fourth, and one of the Vaitalīya with 14 and 16 in the two sets respectively. There is also one example of the shortest form of Daṇḍaka metre, with six short syllables followed by

1 Verses in which the last four syllables are not (2) —; (3) -,--; (4) --.
 * viz. (1) ;

2 3

> > 1 Later only in the Mṛcchakaṭikā of classical dramas. 5 U- --. Later first in the Caitanyacandrodaya.