Towards Understanding Tmesis in the Line of The Knight in the Panther’s Skin

Authors

  • Inga Sanikidze Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University Associate Professor

Keywords:

The line of The Knight in the Panther’s Skin;, Tmesis, Worldview

Abstract

What captures our attention is one of the famous sections of The Knight

in the Panther’s Skin, the Davar episode, the final line of the stanza which deals

with the scene depicting the suicide committed by King Parsadan’s sister: [“She

struck herself with a knife, died (mo-ca-k’vda), fell in a stream of blood”]. In our

opinion, this instance of tmesis is one of the constituents of the poet’s worldview,

declaring his civic stance. Therefore, in this case, tmesis as a literary

embellishment should be understood merely as an empirical fact. It is less

debatable that splitting a verb, essentially serves as a tool for cultivating a literary

domain of a language. Consequently, the tmesis of verbal forms seems to be a

literary development; thus, it must not have emerged from a layer of a spoken

language.

As for this particular line in The Knight in the Panther’s Skin, it is closely linked

with the preceding lines [“Someone--who knows (vinca icis) who? – who heard

(visca esma) this wrath of the king / told it to Davar the Kadj, who knows even

heaven (caca is) by her sorcery”], through the poetic rhyme and the repetition as

a literary device, which allow us to understand the homonymous nature of the -

[m]ca particle. The c phoneme under discussion seems to be specifically selected

and its ideogrammic character is suggested by the letter name “can”. It is a fact

that in alliteratively used c, Rustaveli’s creative-literary vision is striving towards

heaven [”caca icis” (“knows even heaven”)]. It takes the form of an upward

vertical, implying Davar’s yearning for or embracing the heaven above.

More specifically, what do we deal with when Rustaveli employs ca in the

final line of Davar’s suicide scene [“mo-ca-k’vda”], inserting it into the verbal

tmesis with his inherent authenticity? It seems unlikely that the poet intends to

emphasize Davar’s death alone [“mo-ca-k’vda” ― “indeed died”]. Rustaveli’s

message must be more profound and concealed through poetry. We believe the

soul of the woman who perceived heaven is drawn towards heaven after physical

death; thus, as we see it, it returns to heaven [*mo-cad-k’vdeba (dies departing

towards heaven)]. The wisdom arrived from heaven must be taken by the heaven

itself; such interrelationship is arc-shaped just the same way as the c grapheme

in the Asomtavruli and Mkhedruli alphabets. We believe such an interpretation of

Davar's episode is constructing one of the significant Rustvelian concepts of the

world.

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Published

2022-09-01

Issue

Section

Commentaries to the Man in the Panther's Skin