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a moralist. Probably that is why not a single one of

the 2438 aphorisms and maxims in the various collec-

tions attributed to Cāṇakya can be found in the whole

of the Mudrārākṣasa.¹
 

 
INTRODUCTION
 

 
4. From most ancient times Cāṇakya-Viṣṇugupta

-Kautilya has been credited with the composition of

a work on Arthaśāstra. We also find Kautilya's name

as a writer on polity in Jain and Buddhist tradition.2

Kamandaki in his Nītisāra made a reverential mention

of Canakya whom he called by his own name-Viṣṇu-

gupta. He said: Salutation to the highly intelligent.

Vişnugupta who sprang from an extensive and

illustrious dynasty, the descendants of which lived

like rşi-s accepting alms from nobody; to him whose

renown became world-wide; to him who was effulgent

like the highly blazing fire; to that most artful and

cunning one, the foremost of those conversant with

Paramartha, who mastered the four Veda-s, as if they

were only one-salutations to that one whose fire of

energy was like the flash of lightning, and through

whose magical powers that resembled in potency and

in fury the thunderbolt, the renowned, powerful and

mountain-like dynasty of Nanda was eradicated for

good. Salutations to him who resembled the god

Saktidhara himself in prowess and who, single-handed,
 

 
1 Probably with the exception of one beginning with the

words patim tyaktvā (6.6). In two of the CnT MSS., there is a

stanza beginning with the same words (CnT II 23.10 and

CnT III 57.4). Cf. CKr, pp. 104-5.
 

 
2 N. C. Banerjee, op. cit., p. 4.