Vasuki (wife of Valluvar)


Vasuki was a Tamil woman who lived around the late Sangam era. She was the wife of the Tamil poet-philosopher Valluvar.

Biography

Very little is known about the life of Vasuki other than her being the wife of Valluvar. According to Maraimalai Adigal, Vasuki was also known as Nagi. She was one of the daughters of Margaseyan, a farmer who lived near Kaviripakkam, and his wife Ambujam. It is said that when Margasahayan's crops contracted disease, Valluvar helped with curing them. As a token of gratitude, Margasahayan offered Valluvar his daughter in marriage. Legend has it that Valluvar asked Vasuki to cook a handful of sand in order to test her before taking her in marriage, and Vasuki miraculously turned it to boiled rice and served him a scrumptious meal. She is widely known as a chaste and pious woman and an ideal Tamil housewife. The couple, however, had no children. Traditional, as well as legendary, accounts about her abound, which have been the subject of scholarly analysis for centuries. Some details about Vasuki, however, are of doubtful historicity.
Traditional accounts hold that Valluvar requested Vasuki to place a toothpick and a bowl of water alongside his dinner plate every day. Without any question, Vasuki dutifully obeyed her husband’s command till the end of her life. Strangely as it may seem, Valluvar never used either of the two that he requested. This, however, did not deter Vasuki from following what her husband said even once. Toward the end of her life, Vasuki remained sullen about her lack of understanding about her husband's dining behavior. Valluvar, perceiving the trouble that he created to his wife by not revealing the reason behind his dining behavior, apologized and said, "It would be a great sin if a grain of rice that I was eating accidentally fell on to the floor. Using the toothpick, I could pick up the fallen grain, rinse it in the bowl of water and eat it thereafter. It is wrong to let our food go to waste." Vasuki died peacefully upon hearing this. This incident is considered as revealing both the sincerity of Valluvar and the devotedness of Vasuki towards her husband.
Other legendary accounts depicting the divine qualities of Vasuki include:
When Vasuki died, Valluvar buried her body in a sitting posture. Valluvar is said to have composed an elegy at the deathbed of Vasuki soon after she died. A quatrain, the verse tells how deeply Valluvar loved his wife.
Original
அடிசிற் கினியாளே! அன்புடை யாளே!
படிசொற் கடவாத பாவாய்!—அடிவருடிப்
பின்தூங்கி முன்எழூஉம் பேதையே போதியோ!
என்தூங்கும் என்கண் இரா.
Transliteration
Adisiṟ kiniyāḷē! Anbudaiyāḷē!
Padisoṟ kadavādha pāvāi!—Adivarudi
Pinthūngi muneḻum pēdhaiyē pōdhiyō!
Enthūngum enkaṇ irā.
Translation
O thou loving one, O sweet'ner of my food,
O wife who ne'er transgressed my word,
Who did'st chafe my feet, rising first and sleeping last,
O when will these eyes know sleep again!

Thus, Valluvar is praised as the only Tamil poet who has sung a verse on his or her spouse. Over the centuries, the individual phrases within the quatrain have become famed maxims on their own.

Legacy

Vasuki is considered the epitome and an archetypal example of a cultured Tamil woman, known for such qualities as kindness, grace, humility, and modesty. In one of her works named the Garland of Advice for Women, poet Avvai exemplifies Vasuki while giving advice to women wherein she instructs the young lady to "perform domestic duties as did the wife of Valluvar."

Citations