பக்கம்:முடியரசன் கவிதைகள்-1-2.pdf/25

விக்கிமூலம் இலிருந்து
இப்பக்கம் மெய்ப்பு பார்க்கப்படவில்லை

23 When the poet discusses the importance of Tamil as our mother-tongue, his rapture knows no bounds: he is frank, ecstatic, and assuring in his profound poetic utterance, insisting on the sincerity of his overwhelming suggestions. Even a child can easily grasp the fundamental brilliance of his argument in defence of his mothertongue with all its alluring charms of sweeter delicacy and expansive accommodation. When Mudiarasan recalls to his memory the achievements of Bharathithasan, Kalianasundara Mudaliar, Desika Vinayagam Pillai and the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ, he cheerfully details their solemn and enduring merits which the world always welcomes as a universal triumph of the human spirit summoned by the human crises. When his poems tranquilly bless the souls of the great departed Indians, they have the geunine tenderness of a warm, holy enduring benediction indeed. His miscellaneous poems enlighten us on the poetic profundity of Kambar's genius in its entire universal appeal of artistic resplendency. Mudiarasan's poetry is charming indeed both in matter and manner: his prosodic variety will please all, and his poetic diction is racy, vivid, rippling, subtle, resonant and suggestive, employing his own concrete, convincing imagery to vivify the imaginative spell of happy human experiences in life’s heaving cosmos. The poet’s ethical emphasis is direct, and neves deviates from the central crisis of life's languorous lavishness.