翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Gamblea malayana
・ Gambler (album)
・ Gambler (board game)
・ Gambler (comics)
・ Gambler (film)
・ Gambler (Madonna song)
・ Gambler First Nation
・ Gambler Indian Reserve No. 63
・ Gambler's Book Shop / GBC Press
・ Gambler's Choice
・ Gambler's conceit
・ Gambler's Ecstasy
・ Gambler's fallacy
・ Gambler's Gold
・ Gambler's Help
Gambler's Lament
・ Gambler's Life
・ Gambler's Palm
・ Gambler's ruin
・ Gamblers Anonymous
・ Gamblers' Ballet
・ Gamblerz
・ Gambles Hill
・ Gambles, Pennsylvania
・ Gamblesby
・ Gamblestown
・ Gamblin
・ Gamblin' Man
・ Gambling
・ Gambling (play)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Gambler's Lament : ウィキペディア英語版
Gambler's Lament

The Gambler's lament (or "Gamester's lament") is one of the hymns of the Rigveda which do not have any direct cultic or religious context.
It is found in the late Tenth Book (RV 10.34), where most of such hymns on "miscellaneous" topics are found, suggesting a date of compilation corresponding to the early Indian Iron Age.〔The Rigveda is mostly dated to between about the 15th and 11th centuries BC, with the tenth book dating to roughly the 11th century. See e.g. p. 184, or see Rigveda for more details.〕
Moriz Winternitz considered the poem to be the "most beautiful among the non–religious poems of the Rig Veda." Arthur Anthony Macdonell writes the following about the poem: "Considering that it is the oldest composition of the kind in existence, we cannot but regard this poem as the most remarkable literary product."
The poem comprises a monologue of a repentant gambler who laments the ruin brought on him because of addiction to the dice. The poem is didactic in nature and shows early indications of the proverbial and sententious poetry in later Hindu texts. Arthur Llewellyn Basham believed that Gambler's Lament was originally constructed as a spell to ensure victory in a game of dice, which was later converted into a cautionary poem by an anonymous poet.
The poem testifies to the popularity of gambling among all classes of Vedic people. The gambling dice (''akșa'') were made from nuts of Terminalia bellirica (''Vibhīdaka''), into an oblong shape with four scoring sides— kŗta (four), tretā (trey), dvāpar (duce), kali (ace). The gambler who drew a multiple of four won the game.
== Contents ==
The hymn consists of 14 verses in the tristubh meter.
In verses 2-3, the narrator describes how the dice have ruined his domestic life (trans. Ralph T. H. Griffith 1889):
The poem then describes the lure of the dice:
The dice are referred to as "the brown ones", as they were made from the brown nuts of Terminalia bellirica.}
In the following verses the dice are described as "deceptive, hot and burning" and being similar to children in that "they give and take again". In verse 13, the poet addresses the gambler in an attempt to reform him, invoking the god Savitr.



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Gambler's Lament」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.