Nala And Damayanti And Other Poems - BestLightNovel.com
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Prince of men, O grant thy pity--grant it, lord of men, to me; 'Mercy is the chief of duties,'--oft from thine own lips I've heard.
Thus as ye are ever speaking--should there any one reply, Mark him well, lest he be Nala--who he is, and where he dwells.
He who to this speech hath listened--and hath thus his answer made, Be his words, O best of Brahmins--treasured and brought home to me, Lest he haply should discover--that by my command ye speak, That again ye may approach him--do ye this without delay.
Whether he be of the wealthy--whether of the poor he be; Be he covetous of riches--learn ye all he would desire."
Thus addressed, went forth the Brahmins--to the realms on every side, Seeking out the royal Nala--in his dark concealed distress.
They through royal cities, hamlets--pastoral dwellings, hermits' cells, Nala every-where went seeking--yet those Brahmins found him not.
All in every part went speaking--in the language they were taught; In the words of Damayanti--spake they in the ears of men.
BOOK XVIII.
Long the time that pa.s.sed, a Brahmin--wise Parnada was his name, Home returning to the city--thus to Bhima's daughter spake: "Damayanti! royal Nala--as I sought Nishadha's king, Came I to Ayodhya's city--the Bhangasuri's abode.
Stood before me, eager listening--to the words thou bad'st us speak, He, the prosperous Rituparna--all excelling! such his name.
Thus as spake I, answered nothing--Rituparna, king of men; Nor of all that full a.s.semblage--more than once addressed by me.
By the king dismissed, when sate I--in a solitary place, One of Rituparna's household--Vahuca, his name, drew near, Charioteer of that great raja--with short arms and all deformed, Skilled to drive the rapid chariot--skilled the viands to prepare.
He, when much he'd groaned in anguish--and had wept again, again, First his courteous salutation--made, then spake in words like these: Even in the extreme of misery--n.o.ble women still preserve, Over their ownselves the mastery--by their virtues winning heaven; Of their faithless lords abandoned--anger feel not even then.
In the breastplate of their virtue--n.o.ble women live unharmed.
By the wretched, by the senseless--by the lost to every joy, She by such a lord forsaken--yet to anger will not yield.
Against him his sustenance seeking--of his robe by birds despoiled, Him consumed with utmost misery--still no wrath the dark-hued feels; Treated well, or ill entreated--when her husband she beholds, Spoiled of bliss, bereft of kingdom--famine-wasted, worn with woe.
Having heard the stranger's language--hither hasted I to come.
Thou hast heard, be thine the judgment--to the king relate thou all."
To Parnada having listened--with her eyes o'erflowed with tears, Secretly went Damayanti--and her mother thus addressed: "Let not what I speak to Bhima--O my mother, be made known-- In thy presence to Sudeva--best of Brahmins, I would speak.
Let not this my secret counsel--to king Bhima be disclosed; This the object we must compa.s.s--if thy daughter thou wouldst please, As myself was to my kindred--swiftly by Sudeva brought, With the same good fortune swiftly--may Sudeva part from hence, Home to bring the royal Nala--mother, to Ayodhya's town."
Resting from his toil, Parnada--of the Brahmin race the best, Did the daughter of Vidarbha--honour, and with wealth reward.
"Brahmin! home if come my Nala--richer guerdon will I give; Much hast thou achieved, and wisely--so as none but thou has done.
That again with my lost husband--n.o.blest Brahmin, I may meet."
Thus addressed, his grateful homage--and his benedictions paid, Having thus achieved his mission--home the wise Parnada went.
Then accosting good Sudeva--Damayanti thus began, And before her mother's presence--in her pain and grief she spake: "Go, Sudeva, to the city--where Ayodhya's raja dwells, Speak thou thus to Rituparna--Come, as of thine own accord.
Once again her Swayembara--does king Bhima's daughter hold; Damayanti, thither hasten--all the kings and sons of kings; Closely now the time is reckoned--when to-morrow's dawn appears; If that thou would'st win the Princess--speed thou, tamer of thy foes.
When the sun is in his rising--she a second lord will choose: Whether lives or is not living--royal Nala, no one knows."
Thus, as he received his mission--hastening to the king, he spake, To the royal Rituparna--spake Sudeva, in these words.
BOOK XIX.
Hearing thus Sudeva's language--Rituparna, king of men With a gentle voice and blandly--thus to Vahuca began.
"Where the princess Damayanti--doth her Swayembara hold In one day to far Vidarbha--Vahuca, I fain would go."
In these words the unknown Nala--by his royal lord addressed All his heart was torn with anguish--thus the lofty-minded thought-- "Can she speak thus, Damayanti--thus with sorrow frantic act?
Is't a stratagem thus subtly--for my sake devised and plann'd?
To desire this deed unholy[118]--is that holy princess driven Wrong'd by me, her basest husband--miserable, mind-estranged!
Fickle is the heart of woman--grievous too is my offence!
Hence she thus might act ign.o.bly--in her exile, reft of friends, Soul-disturbed by her great sorrow--in the excess of her despair.
No! she could not thus have acted--she with n.o.ble offspring blest.
Where the truth, and where the falsehood--setting forth, I best shall judge, I the will of Rituparna--for mine own sake, will obey."
Thus within his mind revolving--Vahuca, his wretched mind, With his folded hands addressed he--Rituparna, king of men: "I thy mandate will accomplish--I will go, O king of men, In a single day, O raja--to Vidarbha's royal town."
Vahuca of all the coursers--did a close inspection make Entering in the royal stable--by Bhangasuri's command.
Ever urged by Rituparna--Vahuca, in horses skilled, Long within himself debating--which the fleetest steeds to choose, He approached four slender coursers--fit, and powerful for the road, Blending mighty strength with fleetness--high in courage and in blood; Free from all the well-known vices--broad of nostril--large of jaw; With the ten good marks distinguished[119]--born in Sindhu[120]--fleet as wind.
As he gazed upon those coursers--spoke the king, almost in wrath: "Is then thus fulfilled our mandate?--think not to deceive us so.
How will these my coursers bear us--slight in strength and slightly breathed-- How can such a way be travelled--and so long, by steeds like these?"--
VAHUCA _spake_.
"Two on th' head, one on the forehead--two and two on either flank-- Two, behold, the chest discloses--and upon the crupper one-- These the horses to Vidharba--that will bear us, doubt not thou; Yet, if others thou preferest--speak, and I will yoke them straight."
RITUPARNA _spake_.
"In the knowledge thou of horses--Vahuca, hast matchless skill; Whichso'er thou think'st the fittest--harness thou without delay."
Then those four excelling horses--n.o.bly bred--of courage high, In their harness to the chariot--did the skilful Nala yoke.-- To the chariot yoked, as mounted--in his eager haste the king To the earth those best of horses--bowed their knees and stooped them down.
Then the n.o.blest of all heroes--Nala, with a soothing voice, Spake unto those horses, gifted--both with fleetness and with strength.
Up the reins when he had gathered--he the charioteer bade mount, First, Varshneya, skilled in driving--at full speed then set he forth.
Urged by Vahuca, those coursers--to the utmost of their speed, All at once in th' air sprung upward--as the driver to unseat.
Then, as he beheld those horses--bearing him as fleet as wind, Did the monarch of Ayodhya--in his silent wonder sit.
When the rattling of the chariot--when the guiding of the reins, When of Vahuca the science--saw he, thus Varshneya thought: "Is it Matali,[121] the chariot--of the king of heaven that drives?
Lo, in Vahuca each virtue--of that G.o.dlike charioteer!
Is it Salihotra skilful--in the race, the strength of steeds, That hath ta'en a human body--thus all-glorious to behold?
Is't, or can it be, king Nala--conqueror of his foemen's realms?
Is the lord of men before us?"--thus within himself he thought.
"If the skill possessed by Nala--Vahuca possesseth too, Lo, of Vahuca the knowledge--and of Nala equal seems; And of Vahuca and Nala--thus alike the age should be.
If 'tis not the n.o.ble Nala--it is one of equal skill.
Mighty ones, disguised, are wandering--in the precincts of this earth.
They, divine by inborn nature--but in earthly forms concealed.
His deformity of body--that my judgment still confounds; Yet that proof alone is wanting--what shall then my judgment be?
In their age they still are equal--though unlike that form misshaped, Nala gifted with all virtues--Vahuca I needs must deem."
Thus the charioteer Varshneya--sate debating in his mind; Much, and much again he pondered--in the silence of his thought.
But the royal Rituparna--Vahuca's surpa.s.sing skill, With the charioteer Varshneya--sate admiring, and rejoiced.
In the guiding of the coursers--his attentive hand he watched, Wondered at his skill, consummate--in consummate joy himself.
BOOK XX.
Over rivers, over mountains--through the forests, over lakes, Fleetly pa.s.sed they, rapid gliding--like a bird along the air.
As the chariot swiftly travelled--lo, Bhangasuri the king Saw his upper garment fallen--from the lofty chariot seat; Though in urgent haste, no sooner--he his fallen mantle saw, Than the king exclaimed to Nala--"Pause, and let us take it up: Check, an instant, mighty-minded!--check thy fiery-footed steeds, While Varshneya, swift dismounting--bears me back my fallen robe."
Nala answered, "Far behind us--doth thy fallen garment lie; Ten miles,[122] lo, it lies behind us--turn we not, to gain it, back."
Answered thus by n.o.ble Nala--then Bhangasuri the king, Bowed with fruit, within the forest--saw a tall Vibhitak[123] tree: Gazing on that tree, the raja--spake to Vahuca in haste, "Now, O charioteer, in numbers, thou shalt see my pa.s.sing skill.
Each one knows not every science--none there is that all things knows: Perfect skill in every knowledge--in one mind there may not be.
On yon tree are leaves how many?--Vahuca, how many fruit?
Say, how many are there fallen?--one above a hundred, there.
One leaf is there 'bove a hundred--and one fruit, O Vahuca!