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Book Iv. Canto Xxii. B'ali Dead

Canto Xxii.: Bli Dead.


There breathing still with slow faint sighs

Lay Bli on the ground: his eyes,

p. 351

Damp with the tears of death, he raised,

On conquering Sugrva gazed,

And then in clearest speech expressed

The tender feelings of his breast;

'Not to my charge, Sugrva, lay

Thine injuries avenged to-day;

But rather blame resistless Fate

That urged me on infuriate.

Fate ne'er agreed our lives to bless

With simultaneous happiness:

To dwell like brothers side by side

In tender love was still denied.

The Vnars' realm is thine to-day:

Begin, O King, thy rightful sway; 1

for I must go at Yama's call

To sojourn in his gloomy hall;

Must part and leave this very hour

My life, my realm, my kingly power,

And go instead of these to gain

Bright glory free from spot and stain.

Now at thy hands one boon I seek

With the last words my lips shall speak,

And, though it be no easy thing,

perform the task I give thee, King.

This son of mine, no foolish boy,

Worthy of bliss and nursed in joy,--

See, prostrate on the ground he lies,

The hot tears welling from his eyes--

The child I love so well, more sweet

Than life itself, for woe unmeet,--

To him be kindly favour shown:

O guard and keep him as thine own.

Retain him ever by thy side,

His father, helper, friend, and guide.

From fear and woe his young life save,

And give him all his father gave.

Then Tr's son in time shall be

Brave, resolute, and famed like thee,

And march before thee to the fight

Where stricken fiends shall own his might.

While yet a tender stripling, fame

Shall bruit abroad his warrior name,

And brigbtlv shall his glory shine

For exploits worthy of his line.

Child of Sushen, 2 my Tr well

Obscurest lore can read and tell;

And, trained in wondrous art, divines

Each mystery of boding signs.

Her solemn warning ne'er despise,

Do boldly what her lips advise;

For things to come her eye can see,

And with her words events agree.

And for the son of Raghu's sake

The toil and danger undertake:

For breach of faith were grievous wrong,

Nor wouldst thou be unpunished long.

Now, brother, take this chain of gold,

Gift of celestial hands of old,

Or when I die its charm will flee,

And all its might be lost with me.'

The loving speech Sugrva heard.

And all his heart with woe was stirred.

Remorse and gentle pity stole

Each thought of triumph from his soul:

Thus fades the light when Rhu 1b mars

The glory of the Lord of Stars. 2b

All angry thoughts were staved and stilled

And kindly love his bosom filled.

His brother's word the chief obeyed

And took the chain as Bli prayed.

On little Angad standing nigh

The dying hero fixed his eye,

And, ready from this world to part,

Spoke the fond utterance of his heart:

'Let time and place thy thoughts employ:

In woe be strong, he meek in joy.

Accept both pain and pleasure, still

Obedient to Sugrva's will.

Thou hast, my darling, from the first

With tender care been softly nursed;

But harder days, if thou wouldst win

Sugrva's love, must now begin.

To those who hate him ne'er incline,

Nor count his foe a friend of thine.

In all thy thoughts his welfare seek,

Obedient, lowly, faithful, meek.

Let no rash suit his bosom pain,

Nor yet from due requsts abstain. 3b

Each is a grievous fault, between

The two is round the happy mean.'

Then Bli ceased: his eyeballs rolled

In stress of anguish uncontrolled

His massive teeth were bared to view,

And from the frame the spirit flew.

Their lord and leader dead, the crowd

Of noblest Vnars shrieked aloud:

'Since thou, O King, hast sought the skies

All desolate Kishkindh lies.

Her woods, where Vnars loved to rove,

Are empty now, and hill and grove.

From every eye the light is fled,

Since thou, our mighty lord, art dead.

Thine was the unwearied arm that bore

The brunt of deadly fight of yore

With Golabh the Gandharva, when,

Lasting through five long years and ten,

p. 352

The dreadful conflict knew no stay

In gloom of night, in glare of day;

And when the fifteenth year had past

Thy dire opponent fell at last.

If such a foeman fell beneath

Our hero's arm and awful teeth

Who freed us from our terror, how

Is conquering Bli fallen now?'

Then when they saw their leader slain

Great anguish seized the Vnar train,

Weeping their mighty chief, as when

In pastures near a lion's den

The cows by sudden fear are stirred,

Slain the bold bull who led the herd.

And hapless Tr sank below

The whelming waters of her woe,

Looked upon Bli's face and fell

Beside him whom she loved go well,

Like a young creeper clinging round

A tall tree prostrate on the ground.

Footnotes

350:
1b Sugrva and Angad.

351:1
Angad himself, being too young to govern, would be Yuvarja or heir- apparent.

351:2
Sushena was the son of Varuna the God of the sea,

351:
1b A demon with the tail of a dragon, that causes eclipses by endeavouring to swallow the sun and moon.

351:
2b The Lord of Stars is the Moon.

351:3b Or the passage may be interpreted:


'Be neither to obsequious or affectionate, nor wanting in due respect of love.'
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