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ii
 
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<p lang="en">ii</p>
<p lang="sa">
The history of Sanskrit drama offers nowhere such
fertile ground for romantic speculations as in this group of

fertile ground for romantic speculations as in this group of
thirteen anonymous dramas which the late Pandit Ganapati

Sastri of Trivandrum attributed to the great poet Bhāsa

on the strength of certain facts which, however, are fast

failing him. It was in the nature of things, that in the

first sensation of this discovery, so fraught with the most

wide-reaching results for the history of the drama, it should

have been hailed by a chorus of applause to which both East

and West joined their voices. If, however, there was an un-

reasoned and uncritical haste in propounding and support-

ing the theory, there was also not lacking the nerve and the
animus of a hot controversy in the arguments urged against

animus of a hot controversy in the arguments urged against
the theory by those who declared these dramas to be the

work of the later play-wrights of Kerala. Thus, if the

supporters of the hypothesis could not advance a single argu-

ment that may be regarded as conclusive, the evidence on
the other side too is mainly negative in character and fails

the other side too is mainly negative in character and fails
equally to produce conviction. The problem, even after

many years of heated controversy, appears to be much more

complex than was generally supposed and is as far from a

satisfactory solution as ever.
 
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<p lang="sa">
The views expressed on the problem fall into three

distinct schools, (i) those that have lent their whole-hearted

support to the hypothesis, (ii) those that have opposed the

hypothesis (iii) and those that have found a via media and

have held that the contention of the opposing sides is based

upon partial truths, and that in a sense these plays are Bhāsa

plays and in a sense they are not. Here is a brief résumé of
the principal arguments advanced in support of their thesis

the principal arguments advanced in support of their thesis
by these different schools of opinion upon the subject.
 
</p>
<p lang="sa">
Although the name of Bhāsa is nowhere mentioned in

the manuscripts, neither in the body of the texts nor in the
 
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