Home > Library > New > Anonymous > The Ramayana > Book Iv. Canto Lxv. The Council

Book Iv. Canto Lxv. The Council

Canto Lxv.: The Council.


But none of all the host was found

To clear the sea with desperate bound,

Though each, as Angad bade, declared

His proper power and what he dared. 1

Then spake good Jmbavan the sage,

Chief of them all for reverend age;

'I, Vnar chieftains, long ago

Limbs light to leap could likewise show,

But now on frame and spirit weighs

The burthen of my length of days.

Still task like this I may not slight,

When Rma and our king unite.

So listen while I tell, O friends,

What lingering strength mine age attends.

If my poor leap may aught avail,

Of ninety leagues, I will not fail.

Far other strength in youth's fresh prime

I boasted, in the olden time,

When, at Prahlda's 1b solemn rite,

I circled in my rapid flight

Lord Vishnu, everlasting God,

When through the universe he trod.

But now my limbs are weak and old,

My youth is fled, its fire is cold,

And these exhausted nerves to strain

In such a task were idle pain,'

Then Angad due obeisance paid,

And to the chief his answer made:

'Then I, ye noble Vnars, I

Mvself the mighty leap will try:

Although perchance the power I lack

To leap from Lank's island back'

Thus the impetuous chieftain cried,

And Jmbavan the sage replied:

'Whate'er thy power and might may be,

This task, O Prince, is not for thee.

Kings go not forth themselves, but send

The servants who their best attend.

Thou art the darling and the boast,

The honoured lord of all the host.

In thee the root, O Angad, lies

Of our appointed enterprise;

And thee, on whom our hopes depend,

Our care must cherish and defend.'

Then Bli's noble son replied:

'Needs must I go whate'er betide,

For, if no chief this exploit dare,

What waits us all save blank despair,--

Upon the ground again to lie

In hopeless misery, fast, and die?

For not a hope of life I see

If we neglect our king's decree*'

Then spoke the aged chief again:

'
Now your attempt shall not be in vain,

For to the task will I incite

A chieftain of sufficient might.'

p. 392

Footnotes

391:1
Each chief comes forward and says how far he can leap. Gaja says he can leap ten yojans. Gavaksha can leap twenty. Gavaya thirty.* and so on up to ninety.

391:
1b Prahl*da, the son of H iranyakasipu, was a pious Datya remarkable for his devotion to Vishnu, and was on this account persecuted by his father.
anansi stories and| tories of anansi
Home > Library > New > Anonymous > The Ramayana > Book Iv. Canto Lxv. The Council