K. S. Narasimhaswamy | |
Birth Date: | 26 January 1915 |
Birth Place: | Kikkeri, Mysore district, Kingdom of Mysore, British India (now Mandya district, Karnataka, India) |
Death Place: | Bangalore, India |
Occupation: | Poet |
Nationality: | Indian |
Period: | Navodaya, Romantic movement |
Awards: | National Film Award for Best Lyrics –1991 Pampa Award – 1995 |
Kikkeri Subbarao Narasimhaswamy (26 January 1915 – 27 December 2003) was an Indian poet who wrote in Kannada language. His most popular collection of poems, Mysooru Mallige, has seen more than thirty-two reprints and is sometimes given to newly married couples in Karnataka.[1] [2] Narasimhaswamy is a recipient of the Sahitya Akademi Award, Kannada sahitya Academy Award,[3] and the Asian Prize for literature.[4]
Narasimhaswamy was born in Kikkeri in Mandya district. He abandoned studies after his father, who wanted him to become an engineer, died, and took up a job of a clerk in a municipal office in Mysore.[4] However, in 1934, he joined the Central College in Bangalore, where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree.[1] He was transferred to Bangalore in 1954 and retired as a superintendent in the Karnataka Housing Board in the 1970s.[4] He married Venkamma in Tiptur in 1936. He often portrayed his wife as the inspiration for his poems which mainly deal with romance in married life.[1]
Narasimhaswamy's romantic love poems, inspired by Robert Burns (whose work he translated to Kannada as Robert Burnsna Premageetegalu) were unique to the language at the time when most Kannada poetry dealt with nature and the natural world.[3]