
The Mystique of Sigiriya:Whispers of the Mirror Wall written
by W.J.M.Lokubandara will be launched at 6 pm at the Speaker’s
Residence tomorrow (01).
It is not often recognized that ‘some of the most astonishing
documents in the ancient world are the Sigiri graffiti.
Consisting of more than 1500 surviving writings, many of them
fragmentary, they are in a true sense unique, with no parallel
elsewhere. Nearly 700 graffiti were read and published by
Senarat Paranavitana in the 1950s and another 820 deciphered
more recently by Benille Priyanka. They record the individual
thoughts, feelings and emotions of hundreds of visitors to the
remains at the historic palace site of Sigiriya - a World
Heritage city - over a time span of nearly eight hundred years,
from the beginning of the sixth century onwards.
The greater part of the Sigiri graffiti dates from the eight
to the tenth centuries and is in verse. These verses, which form
the subject of the present book, are mostly poems addressed to,
the female figures depicted on the rock face above the Mirror
Wall, a highly polished protective wall forming part ascent to
the palace on the summit of the precipitous Sigiriya rock. They
are in essence poems about paintings, ‘art about art’.
In W. J. M. Lokubandara’s The Mystique of Sigiriya:
Whispers of the Mirror Wall, we have the first book length
literary appraisal in English-of the poems contained in the
Sigiri graffiti. The very title of the original Sinhala edition
of the present book, Sigiri Gi Siri, beautifully captures
the classic elegance and refinement of the Sigiriya poems, which
occupy a distinctive place - literary, contextual and historical
- in a widespread Asian tradition of epigrammatic poetry.
The English version of Sigiri Gi Siri, like the
original publication, analyses the poetry with keen insight and
sensitivity and introduces this modern reading of the Sigiriya
verses to an international audience. It invites the attention of
a wider range of readers, writers and scholars than those who
have hitherto had access to the Sigiriya poems.
Professor Senake Bandaranayake.