2023-05-26 04:24:07 by srinivas.kothuri

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(iii)
 

 
The aim of this book is to be a corrective of that semi-

un-believer. The author is an agent of the Lord and what an

agent is has already been stated. The author of this book, Sri

Balavyasa Varanasi Subrahmanya Sastry, is a savant of Andhra

Desa under whom scores of students have studied many Sastras.

The book is a standing testimony for his being thousand-edged.

He quots copiously from almost all Sastras, Puranas and Samhi-

tas, brings in the aptest quotations, marshals arguments in a

matchless manner. For the use of the common man, he has

translated all Sanskrit quotations. His Telugu prose style is

lucid and easily understandable; but sometimes it cannot but

be terse and rather difficult to follow. His commentary on the

aphorism "Loka Vidwishtam parityajet Nachereth" is an exam-

ple. The subtlety of the argument is too difficult to be under-

stood, it cannot but be so. It can only be explained that way.

For one who is untutored in the meshes of logic, some things

always remain unattained. A great scholar is often prone to

disregard the changes of life and the surges of fate. There must

be something or that force of God, that is the creator and the

sustainer in him for doing this kind of work, and this Balavyasa

seems to have it in abundance. He has previously produced 4

volumes of criticism disproving the ungest and wayward acqui-

sitions of the unvedic-minded people. That book is something

like an axe applied to the branches but this book is a blow at the

root of that vicious tree.
 

 
If one is tempted to find a trace of insufficiency in this

book, it is as regards his criticism levelled against Budhism.

Budhism is a religion widely read about nowadays from innu-

merable books written by Western scholars and his criticism of

Budhism mainly treats with the charges made against the four

Schools of thought taken up by Sri Sankaracharya. And almost

all doubts of the believer are cleared and all the questions of the

doubters are answered. This is almost a compendium of the

salient points of the Vedic religion. A part from many things,

one great question is solved here, the one question that conjured

up the bogey of the untrue chronology which has completely

upset the balance of the stable traditional mind. It is about the

date of Budha. The Western historians have purposely and

wilfully shuffled the facts to bring out the magic card. Friest