Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Royalty walking off the page

-

The fact that Primary Level students require material that is interestin­g, appealing and simple, led the writer to take on this task. Her foremost aim is not only to create interest in the material but also to inculcate the reading habit, to improve word power and strengthen the students’ language skills. The images, comparison­s and similes used no doubt lead to incidental learning of the language, and the inclusion of dialogue, ideal for role-play, promotes practice in speech.

The reading matter itself is very simple; simple and repetitive for fixation. But it grows gradually, and naturally, to compound and complex sentence structures as it begins to touch upon the lofty. The ‘reading help’ given at the end of each passage to assist the weaker child, is also an aid to spelling, while comprehens­ion questions monitor and assess the pupil’s understand­ing of the reading. The author writes of kings the pupil might already be acquainted with from common knowledge, and gives them in story form to arouse the child’s interest, giving glimpses into the loves, fears, joys and wraths of royal personages like the kings Pandukabay­a, Devanampiy­atissa, and Buddhadasa.

The book not only enlightens readers about the history and culture of the Sri Lankans but also imparts high ideals that have a positive impact on life. For example, the caring habits stressed in King Buddhadasa’s story, his deep compassion for the sick and suffering, where the king himself attends on the afflicted, would make the young readers reflect on such values.

The popular story of King Pandukabay­a occupies a good portion of the book. Above and beyond his uncles’ relentless pursuit to have him killed and his miraculous escapes and life in the forest, the reader is presented with a different kind of conquest in the narration of how the fugitive prince while training and practising fencing in the forest meets Pali, and smitten by her unsurpassi­ng beauty, resolves to make her his own. He asks her to come away with him to which she readily agrees, and he rides off with his prize thus provoking an onslaught on him by all but one of his uncles. The ensuing battle leads to their deaths and consequent­ly to the prince’s accession to the throne.

The prince, now King Pandukabay­a, faithful to his word, or rather, his own playful prediction made at their first meeting, makes Swarnapali (Pali) his queen, and the story ends there to be picked up again in a second informativ­e section titled ‘More About the Kings’ that describes, in some detail, his reign. The en-

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka