The play Sakuntala (Chinese name
Finding Sakuntala Again by the Keepsake) by Kalidasa, the famous Indian
dramatist, begins with the encounter between the King Dushyanta and the
miraculously beautiful Sakuntala when Dushyanta is hunting in the woods. They
fall in love at the first sight and get married. Then the King leaves her with
his ring and soon returns to the capital. She waits for a long time but the king
doesn't come back. Sakuntala decides to find her lover, expecting him to keep
his parting promise. But a curse intervenes and makes the King forget her, until
he sees the ring again. On the way to the King's capital Sakuntala loses the
ring and the King denounces her. Eventually the ring is retrieved and when the
king sees it, he recalls his memory about Sakuntala. The story about Sakuntala
and the King Dushyanta was first described in the epic Mahabharata.
Recompose into the drama
brimming with poetic sentiment from an ancient story, Sakuntala shows
great originality of the dramatist. Sakuntala in the drama is of Indian
classical beauty, vivid image and integral personality. The drama highly praises
true love as well as the honesty, goodness and the determination to pursue
beautiful life of people in lower classes, while criticizes the soul of the
monarch indirectly. With poetic sentiment, fascinating plot, unique
personalities of characters, exquisite description of the inner world, elegant
landscape depiction, and vivid, simple language, the drama unifies content and
form perfectly.
Sakuntala was popular in ancient India with various versions.
In the Middle Ages, it was translated into different Indian dialects. Kalidasa
was still famous all over the world in modern times for his Sakuntala.
William Jones, a British scholar of Sanskrit who was the first to translate
Sakuntala into English in 1789, regarded Kalidasa as Indian Shakespeare.
Later Sankuntala was translated into other European languages and well
received in European literatus, especially in Germany.
Since the 1920s, several
Chinese versions of Sakuntala appeared, which were all based on English
version or French version. It was not until 1956 that the Chinese version (by Ji
Xianlin) directly translated from Sanskrit was published. The drama
Sakuntala was presented on the stage in China twice since the
1950s.