The Sanskrit Epics

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  Who all their mighty kin surpass,

  Whom men Matangas name,

  And Mrigas spotted black and white,

  And Bhadras of unwearied might,

  And Mandras hard to tame.77

  Thus, worthy of the name she bore,78

  Ayodhyá for a league or more

  Cast a bright glory round,

  Where Daśaratha wise and great

  Governed his fair ancestral state,

  With every virtue crowned.

  Like Indra in the skies he reigned

  In that good town whose wall contained

  High domes and turrets proud,

  With gates and arcs of triumph decked,

  And sturdy barriers to protect

  Her gay and countless crowd.

  Canto VII. The Ministers.

  TWO SAGES, HOLY saints, had he,

  His ministers and priests to be:

  Vaśishṭha, faithful to advise,

  And Vámadeva, Scripture-wise.

  Eight other lords around him stood,

  All skilled to counsel, wise and good:

  Jayanta, Vijay, Dhrishṭi bold

  In fight, affairs of war controlled:

  Siddhárth and Arthasádhak true

  Watched o’er expense and revenue,

  And Dharmapál and wise Aśok

  Of right and law and justice spoke.

  With these the sage Sumantra, skilled

  To urge the car, high station filled.

  All these in knowledge duly trained

  Each passion and each sense restrained:

  With modest manners, nobly bred

  Each plan and nod and look they read,

  Upon their neighbours’ good intent,

  Most active and benevolent:

  As sit the Vasus79 round their king,

  They sate around him counselling.

  They ne’er in virtue’s loftier pride

  Another’s lowly gifts decried.

  In fair and seemly garb arrayed,

  No weak uncertain plans they made.

  Well skilled in business, fair and just,

  They gained the people’s love and trust,

  And thus without oppression stored

  The swelling treasury of their lord.

  Bound in sweet friendship each to each,

  They spoke kind thoughts in gentle speech.

  They looked alike with equal eye

  On every caste, on low and high.

  Devoted to their king, they sought,

  Ere his tongue spoke, to learn his thought,

  And knew, as each occasion rose,

  To hide their counsel or disclose.

  In foreign lands or in their own

  Whatever passed, to them was known.

  By secret spies they timely knew

  What men were doing or would do.

  Skilled in the grounds of war and peace

  They saw the monarch’s state increase,

  Watching his weal with conquering eye

  That never let occasion by,

  While nature lent her aid to bless

  Their labours with unbought success.

  Never for anger, lust, or gain,

  Would they their lips with falsehood stain.

  Inclined to mercy they could scan

  The weakness and the strength of man.

  They fairly judged both high and low,

  And ne’er would wrong a guiltless foe;

  Yet if a fault were proved, each one

  Would punish e’en his own dear son.

  But there and in the kingdom’s bound

  No thief or man impure was found:

  None of loose life or evil fame,

  No tempter of another’s dame.

  Contented with their lot each caste

  Calm days in blissful quiet passed;

  And, all in fitting tasks employed,

  Country and town deep rest enjoyed,

  With these wise lords around his throne

  The monarch justly reigned,

  And making every heart his own

  The love of all men gained.

  With trusty agents, as beseems,

  Each distant realm he scanned,

  As the sun visits with his beams

  Each corner of the land.

  Ne’er would he on a mightier foe

  With hostile troops advance,

  Nor at an equal strike a blow

  In war’s delusive chance.

  These lords in council bore their part

  With ready brain and faithful heart,

  With skill and knowledge, sense and tact,

  Good to advise and bold to act.

  And high and endless fame he won

  With these to guide his schemes,

  As, risen in his might, the sun

  Wins glory with his beams.

  Canto VIII. Sumantra’s Speech.

  BUT SPLENDID, JUST, and great of mind,

  The childless king for offspring pined.

  No son had he his name to grace,

  Transmitter of his royal race.

  Long had his anxious bosom wrought,

  And as he pondered rose the thought:

  “A votive steed ‘twere good to slay,

  So might a son the gift repay.”

  Before his lords his plan he laid,

  And bade them with their wisdom aid:

  Then with these words Sumantra, best

  Of royal counsellors, addressed:

  “Hither, Vaśishṭha at their head,

  Let all my priestly guides be led.”

  To him Sumantra made reply:

  “Hear, Sire, a tale of days gone by.

  To many a sage in time of old,

  Sanatkumár, the saint, foretold

  How from thine ancient line, O King,

  A son, when years came round, should spring.

  “Here dwells,” ’twas thus the seer began,

  “Of Kaśyap’s80 race, a holy man,

  Vibháṇdak named: to him shall spring

  A son, the famous Rishyaśring.

  Bred with the deer that round him roam,

  The wood shall be that hermit’s home.

  To him no mortal shall be known

  Except his holy sire alone.

  Still by those laws shall he abide

  Which lives of youthful Bráhmans guide,

  Obedient to the strictest rule

  That forms the young ascetic’s school:

  And all the wondering world shall hear

  Of his stern life and penance drear;

  His care to nurse the holy fire

  And do the bidding of his sire.

  Then, seated on the Angas’81 throne,

  Shall Lomapád to fame be known.

  But folly wrought by that great king

  A plague upon the land shall bring;

  No rain for many a year shall fall

  And grievous drought shall ruin all.

  The troubled king with many a prayer

  Shall bid the priests some cure declare:

  “The lore of Heaven ’tis yours to know,

  Nor are ye blind to things below:

  Declare, O holy men, the way

  This plague to expiate and stay.”

  Those best of Bráhmans shall reply:

  “By every art, O Monarch, try

  Hither to bring Vibháṇdak’s child,

  Persuaded, captured, or beguiled.

  And when the boy is hither led

  To him thy daughter duly wed.”

  But how to bring that wondrous boy

  His troubled thoughts will long employ,

  And hopeless to achieve the task

  He counsel of his lords will ask,

  And bid his priests and servants bring

  With honour saintly Rishyaśring.

  But when they hear the monarch’s speech,

  All these their master will beseech,

  With trembling hearts and looks of woe,
<
br />   To spare them, for they fear to go.

  And many a plan will they declare

  And crafty plots will frame,

  And promise fair to show him there,

  Unforced, with none to blame.

  On every word his lords shall say,

  The king will meditate,

  And on the third returning day

  Recall them to debate.

  Then this shall be the plan agreed,

  That damsels shall be sent

  Attired in holy hermits’ weed,

  And skilled in blandishment,

  That they the hermit may beguile

  With every art and amorous wile

  Whose use they know so well,

  And by their witcheries seduce

  The unsuspecting young recluse

  To leave his father’s cell.

  Then when the boy with willing feet

  Shall wander from his calm retreat

  And in that city stand,

  The troubles of the king shall end,

  And streams of blessed rain descend

  Upon the thirsty land.

  Thus shall the holy Rishyaśring

  To Lomapád, the mighty king,

  By wedlock be allied;

  For Śántá, fairest of the fair,

  In mind and grace beyond compare,

  Shall be his royal bride.

  He, at the Offering of the Steed,

  The flames with holy oil shall feed,

  And for King Daśaratha gain

  Sons whom his prayers have begged in vain.”

  “I have repeated, Sire, thus far,

  The words of old Sanatkumár,

  In order as he spoke them then

  Amid the crowd of holy men.”

  Then Daśaratha cried with joy,

  “Say how they brought the hermit boy.”

  Canto IX. Rishyasring.

  THE WISE SUMANTRA, thus addressed,

  Unfolded at the king’s behest

  The plan the lords in council laid

  To draw the hermit from the shade:

  “The priest, amid the lordly crowd,

  To Lomapád thus spoke aloud:

  “Hear, King, the plot our thoughts have framed,

  A harmless trick by all unblamed.

  Far from the world that hermit’s child

  Lives lonely in the distant wild:

  A stranger to the joys of sense,

  His bliss is pain and abstinence;

  And all unknown are women yet

  To him, a holy anchoret.

  The gentle passions we will wake

  That with resistless influence shake

  The hearts of men; and he

  Drawn by enchantment strong and sweet

  Shall follow from his lone retreat,

  And come and visit thee.

  Let ships be formed with utmost care

  That artificial trees may bear,

  And sweet fruit deftly made;

  Let goodly raiment, rich and rare,

  And flowers, and many a bird be there

  Beneath the leafy shade.

  Upon the ships thus decked a band

  Of young and lovely girls shall stand,

  Rich in each charm that wakes desire,

  And eyes that burn with amorous fire;

  Well skilled to sing, and play, and dance

  And ply their trade with smile and glance

  Let these, attired in hermits’ dress,

  Betake them to the wilderness,

  And bring the boy of life austere

  A voluntary captive here.”

  He ended; and the king agreed,

  By the priest’s counsel won.

  And all the ministers took heed

  To see his bidding done.

  In ships with wondrous art prepared

  Away the lovely women fared,

  And soon beneath the shade they stood

  Of the wild, lonely, dreary wood.

  And there the leafy cot they found

  Where dwelt the devotee,

  And looked with eager eyes around

  The hermit’s son to see.

  Still, of Vibháṇdak sore afraid,

  They hid behind the creepers’ shade.

  But when by careful watch they knew

  The elder saint was far from view,

  With bolder steps they ventured nigh

  To catch the youthful hermit’s eye.

  Then all the damsels, blithe and gay,

  At various games began to play.

  They tossed the flying ball about

  With dance and song and merry shout,

  And moved, their scented tresses bound

  With wreaths, in mazy motion round.

  Some girls as if by love possessed,

  Sank to the earth in feigned unrest,

  Up starting quickly to pursue

  Their intermitted game anew.

  It was a lovely sight to see

  Those fair ones, as they played,

  While fragrant robes were floating free,

  And bracelets clashing in their glee

  A pleasant tinkling made.

  The anklet’s chime, the Koïl’s82 cry

  With music filled the place

  As ‘twere some city in the sky

  Which heavenly minstrels grace.

  With each voluptuous art they strove

  To win the tenant of the grove,

  And with their graceful forms inspire

  His modest soul with soft desire.

  With arch of brow, with beck and smile,

  With every passion-waking wile

  Of glance and lotus hand,

  With all enticements that excite

  The longing for unknown delight

  Which boys in vain withstand.

  Forth came the hermit’s son to view

  The wondrous sight to him so new,

  And gazed in rapt surprise,

  For from his natal hour till then

  On woman or the sons of men

  He ne’er had cast his eyes.

  He saw them with their waists so slim,

  With fairest shape and faultless limb,

  In variegated robes arrayed,

  And sweetly singing as they played.

  Near and more near the hermit drew,

  And watched them at their game,

  And stronger still the impulse grew

  To question whence they came.

  They marked the young ascetic gaze

  With curious eye and wild amaze,

  And sweet the long-eyed damsels sang,

  And shrill their merry laughter rang.

  Then came they nearer to his side,

  And languishing with passion cried:

  “Whose son, O youth, and who art thou,

  Come suddenly to join us now?

  And why dost thou all lonely dwell

  In the wild wood? We pray thee, tell,

  We wish to know thee, gentle youth;

  Come, tell us, if thou wilt, the truth.”

  He gazed upon that sight he ne’er

  Had seen before, of girls so fair,

  And out of love a longing rose

  His sire and lineage to disclose:

  “My father,” thus he made reply,

  “Is Kaśyap’s son, a saint most high,

  Vibháṇdak styled; from him I came,

  And Rishyaśring he calls my name.

  Our hermit cot is near this place:

  Come thither, O ye fair of face;

  There be it mine, with honour due,

  Ye gentle youths, to welcome you.”

  They heard his speech, and gave consent,

  And gladly to his cottage went.

  Vibháṇdak’s son received them well

  Beneath the shelter of his cell

  With guest-gift, water for their feet,

  And woodland fruit and roots to eat,

  They smiled, and spoke sweet words like these,

 
Delighted with his courtesies:

  “We too have goodly fruit in store,

  Grown on the trees that shade our door;

  Come, if thou wilt, kind Hermit, haste

  The produce of our grove to taste;

  And let, O good Ascetic, first

  This holy water quench thy thirst.”

  They spoke, and gave him comfits sweet

  Prepared ripe fruits to counterfeit;

  And many a dainty cate beside

  And luscious mead their stores supplied.

  The seeming fruits, in taste and look,

  The unsuspecting hermit took,

  For, strange to him, their form beguiled

  The dweller in the lonely wild.

  Then round his neck fair arms were flung,

  And there the laughing damsels clung,

  And pressing nearer and more near

  With sweet lips whispered at his ear;

  While rounded limb and swelling breast

  The youthful hermit softly pressed.

  The pleasing charm of that strange bowl,

  The touch of a tender limb,

  Over his yielding spirit stole

  And sweetly vanquished him.

  But vows, they said, must now be paid;

  They bade the boy farewell,

  And, of the aged saint afraid,

  Prepared to leave the dell.

  With ready guile they told him where

  Their hermit dwelling lay:

  Then, lest the sire should find them there,

  Sped by wild paths away.

  They fled and left him there alone

  By longing love possessed;

  And with a heart no more his own

  He roamed about distressed.

  The aged saint came home, to find

  The hermit boy distraught,

  Revolving in his troubled mind

  One solitary thought.

  “Why dost thou not, my son,” he cried,

  “Thy due obeisance pay?

  Why do I see thee in the tide

  Of whelming thought to-day?

  A devotee should never wear

  A mien so sad and strange.

  Come, quickly, dearest child, declare

  The reason of the change.”

  And Rishyaśring, when questioned thus,

  Made answer in this wise:

  “O sire, there came to visit us

  Some men with lovely eyes.

  About my neck soft arms they wound

  And kept me tightly held

  To tender breasts so soft and round,

  That strangely heaved and swelled.

  They sing more sweetly as they dance

  Than e’er I heard till now,

  And play with many a sidelong glance

  And arching of the brow.”

  “My son,” said he, “thus giants roam

  Where holy hermits are,

  And wander round their peaceful home

  Their rites austere to mar.

 

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