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  2. Śatakatraya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Śatakatraya

    'The Three Hundred Poems of Moral Values') refers to three Indian collections of Sanskrit poetry, containing a hundred verses each. The three śataka's are known as the Nītiśataka , Śṛṅgāraśataka , and Vairāgyaśataka , and are attributed to Bhartṛhari c. 5th century CE.

  3. Amaru Shataka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amaru_Shataka

    The Amaruśataka or Amarukaśataka (अमरुशतक, "the hundred stanzas of Amaru"), authored by Amaru (also Amaruka), is a collection of poems dated to about the 7th [1] or 8th century. [ 2 ] The Amaruśataka ranks as one of the finest lyrical poetry in the annals of Sanskrit literature , ranking with Kalidasa and Bhartṛhari 's ...

  4. Sumathi Satakam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumathi_Satakam

    The poems do not look anything like the sophisticated compositions using the highly cultivated language of . Since the Telugu used by the author is so close to what the common people used, the poems look surprisingly familiar to the users of the Telugu. The poems have an astonishing communication power. All the poems are in kanda padyam meter.

  5. Shataka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shataka

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  6. Ram Ki Shakti Puja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram_Ki_Shakti_Puja

    ' Rama's worship of Shakti ') is a poem in Hindi by Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala'. It was published in 1937 in the second edition of Nirala's poetry collection Anamika. This long poem consists of 312 lines composed in Nirala's tailored poetic meter, Shakti Puja - a rhyming meter of twenty-four syllables. This poem is regarded as one of the finest ...

  7. Bihari Lal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bihari_Lal

    Bihari Lal Chaube or Bihārī (1595–1663) [1] was a Hindi poet, who is famous for writing the Satasaī (Seven Hundred Verses) in Brajbhasha, a collection of approximately seven hundred distichs, which is perhaps the most celebrated Hindi work of poetic art, as distinguished from narrative and simpler styles. [2]

  8. Ramavtar Tyagi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramavtar_Tyagi

    In the eighth standard, his poem "Samarpan" is part of a Hindi Text book in the UP Basic Education, Lucknow. Shri Ramdhari Singh Dinkar commented on his poems, saying "Tyagi has written songs which certify that the songs in Hindi carry new language, new proverbs, new pose, new vision. I love the work of Tyagi.

  9. Indian epic poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_epic_poetry

    Indian epic poetry is the epic poetry written in the Indian subcontinent, traditionally called Kavya (or Kāvya; Sanskrit: काव्य, IAST: kāvyá).The Ramayana and the Mahabharata, which were originally composed in Sanskrit and later translated into many other Indian languages, and the Five Great Epics of Tamil literature and Sangam literature are some of the oldest surviving epic ...