Shakuntala

Home > Other > Shakuntala > Page 23
Shakuntala Page 23

by Kalidasa


  She seems a slender maid, who soon

  Will be a woman grown.

  Over the rice-fields, laden plants

  Are shivering to the breeze;

  While in his brisk caresses dance

  The blossom-burdened trees;

  He ruffles every lily-pond

  Where blossoms kiss and part,

  And stirs with lover's fancies fond

  The young man's eager heart.

  WINTER

  The bloom of tenderer flowers is past

  And lilies droop forlorn,

  For winter-time is come at last,

  Rich with its ripened corn;

  Yet for the wealth of blossoms lost

  Some hardier flowers appear

  That bid defiance to the frost

  Of sterner days, my dear.

  The vines, remembering summer, shiver

  In frosty winds, and gain

  A fuller life from mere endeavour

  To live through all that pain;

  Yet in the struggle and acquist

  They turn as pale and wan

  As lonely women who have missed

  Known love, now lost and gone.

  Then may these winter days show forth

  To you each known delight,

  Bring all that women count as worth

  Pure happiness and bright;

  While villages, with bustling cry,

  Bring home the ripened corn,

  And herons wheel through wintry sky,

  Forget sad thoughts forlorn.

  EARLY SPRING

  Now, dearest, lend a heedful ear

  And listen while I sing

  Delights to every maiden dear,

  The charms of early spring:

  When earth is dotted with the heaps

  Of corn, when heron-scream

  Is rare but sweet, when passion leaps

  And paints a livelier dream.

  When all must cheerfully applaud

  A blazing open fire;

  Or if they needs must go abroad,

  The sun is their desire;

  When everybody hopes to find

  The frosty chill allayed

  By garments warm, a window-blind

  Shut, and a sweet young maid.

  Then may the days of early spring

  For you be rich and full

  With love's proud, soft philandering

  And many a candy-pull,

  With sweetest rice and sugar-cane:

  And may you float above

  The absent grieving and the pain

  Of separated love.

  SPRING

  A stalwart soldier comes, the spring,

  Who bears the bow of Love;

  And on that bow, the lustrous string

  Is made of bees, that move

  With malice as they speed the shaft

  Of blossoming mango-flower

  At us, dear, who have never laughed

  At love, nor scorned his power.

  Their blossom-burden weights the trees;

  The winds in fragrance move;

  The lakes are bright with lotuses,

  The women bright with love;

  The days are soft, the evenings clear

  And charming; everything

  That moves and lives and blossoms, dear,

  Is sweeter in the spring.

  The groves are beautifully bright

  For many and many a mile

  With jasmine-flowers that are as white

  As loving woman's smile:

  The resolution of a saint

  Might well be tried by this;

  Far more, young hearts that fancies paint

  With dreams of loving bliss.

 

 

 


‹ Prev