Trishanku (Hindi pronunciation: [triʃəŋkũ]) is a 1945 collection of reflective essays in Hindi language by the Indian writer Sachchidananda Vatsyayan (pen name Agyeya), that mostly deals with the concept of Indian and Western poetics.
[1] Trishanku was Agyeya's first collection of essays that had been published in various literary journals at different times.
The volume has an appendix in six parts, which contains practical criticism of medieval and modern Hindi writings: "Keshav Ki Kavitai", "Char Natak", "Ek Bhoomika", "Do Phool", "Adhunik Kavi Mahadevi Verma" and "Vagartha Pratipattaye".
[1] Agyeya described "Rudhi aur Maulikata" as a free translation of Eliot's "Tradition and the Individual Talent".
[5] Due to Agyeya's treatment of subject and the freshness of his expression, Trishanku is considered a milestone in the development of Hindi critical writings.