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Book Iii. Canto Lvi. S'it'a's Disdain

Canto Lvi.: St'S Disdain.


His words the Maithil lady heard

Oppressed by woe but undeterred.

Fear of the fiend she cast aside,

And thus in noble scorn replied:

'His word of honour never stained

King Das'aratha nobly reigned,

The bridge of right, the friend of truth.

His eldest son, a noble youth,

Is Rma, virtue's faithful friend,

Whose glories through the worlds extend.

Long arms and large full eyes has he,

Mv husband, yea a God to me.

With shoulders like the forest king's,

From old Ikshvku's line he springs.

He with his brother Lakshman's aid

Will smite thee with the vengeful blade.

Hadst thou but dared before his eyes

To lay thine hand upon the prize,

Thou stretched before his feet hadst lain

In Janasthn like Khara slain.

Thy boasted rovers of the night

With hideous shapes and giant might,--

Like serpents when the feathered king

Swoops down with his tremendous wing,--

Will find their useless venom fail

When Rma's mighty arms assail.

The rapid arrows bright with gold.

Shot from the bow he loves to hold.

Will rend thy frame from flank to flank

As Gang's waves erode the bank.

Though neither God nor fiend have power

To slay thee in the battle hour,

Yet from his hand shall come thy fate,

Struck down before his vengeful hate.

That mighty lord will strike and end

The days of life thou hast to spend.

Thy days are doomed, thy life is sped

Like victim's to the pillar led.

Yea, if the glance of Rma bright

With fury on thy form should light,

Thou scorched this day wouldst fall and die

p. 296

Like Kma slain by Rudra's eye. 1

He who from heaven the moon could throw,

Or bid its bright rays cease to glow,--

He who could drain the mighty sea

Will set his darling St free

Fled is thy life, thy glory, fled

Thy strength and power: each sense is dead.

Soon Lank widowed by thy guilt

Will see the blood of giants spilt.

This wicked deed, O cruel King,

No triumph, no delight will bring.

Thou with outrageous might and scorn

A woman from her lord hast torn.

My glorious husband far away,

Making heroic strength his stay,

Dwells with his brother, void of fear,

In Dandak forest lone and drear.

No more in force of arms confide:

That haughty strength, that power and pride

My hero with his arrowy rain

From all thy bleeding limbs will drain.

When urged by fate's dire mandate, nigh

Comes the fixt hour for men to die.

Caught in Death's toils their eyes are blind,

And folly takes each wandering mind.

So for the outrage thou hast done

The fate is near thou canst not shun,--

The fate that on thyself and all

Thy giants and thy town shall fall.

I spurn thee: can the altar dight

With vessels for the sacred rite,

O'er which the priest his prayer has said,

Be sullied by an outcaste's tread?

So me, the consort dear and true

Of him who clings to virtue too,

Thy hated touch shall ne'er defile,

Base tyrant lord of Lank's isle.

Can the white swan who floats in pride

Through lilies by her consort's side,

Look for one moment, as they pass,

On the poor diver in the grass?

This senseless body waits thy will.

To torture, chain, to wound or kill.

I will not, King of giants, strive

To keep this fleeting soul alive

But never shall they join the name

Of St with reproach and shame.

Thus as her breast with fury burned

Her bitter speech the dame returned.

Such words of rage and scorn, the last

She uttered, at the fiend she cast

Her taunting speech the giant heard,

And every hair with anger stired,

Then thus with fury in his eye

He made in threats his fierce reply

'Hear Maithil lady, hear my speech

* to my words and ponder each

* thy head twelve months shall fly

And thou thy love wilt still deny,

My cooks shall mince thy flesh with steel

And serve it for my morning meal.'

Thus with terrific threats to her

Spake Rvan, cruel ravener.

Mad with the rage her answer woke

He called the fiendish train and spoke:

'Take her, ye Rkshas dames, who fright

With hideous form and mien the sight,

Who make the flesh of men your food,--

And let her pride be soon subdued.'

He spoke, and at his word the band

Of fiendish monsters raised each hand

In reverence to the giant king,

And pressed round St in a ring.

Rvan once more with stern behest

To those she-fiends his speech addressed:

Shaking the earth beneath his tread,

He stamped his furious foot and said:

'To the As'oka garden bear

The dame, and guard her safely there

Until her stubborn pride be bent

By mingled threat and blandishment.

See that ye watch her well, and tame,

Like some she-elephant, the dame.'

They led her to that garden where

The sweetest flowers perfumed the air,

Where bright trees bore each rarest fruit,

And birds, enamoured, ne'er were mute.

Bowed down with terror and distress,

Watched by each cruel giantess,--

Like a poor solitary deer

When ravening tigresses are near,--

The hapless lady lay distraught

Like some wild thing but newly caught,

And found no solace, no relief

From agonizing fear and grief;

Not for one moment could forget

Each terrifying word and threat,

Or the fierce eyes upon her set

By those who watched around.

She thought of Rma far away,

She mourned for Lakshman as she lay

In grief and terror and dismay

Half fainting on the ground.

Footnotes

296:1
See Book I Caato XXV

mahabharata parva| mahabharata parva
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