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Book Vi. Canto Ii. Sugr'iva's Speech

Canto Ii.: Sugrva'S Speech.


He ceased: and King Sugrva tried

To calm his grief, and thus replied:

'Be to thy nobler nature true,

Nor let despair thy soul subdue.

This cloud of causeless woe dispel,

For all as yet has prospered well,

And we have traced thy queen, and know

The dwelling of our Rkshas foe.

Arise, consult: thy task must be

To cast a bridge athwart the sea,

The city of our foe to reach

That crowns the mountain by the beach;

p. 428

And when our feet that isle shall tread,

Rejoice and deem thy foeman dead.

The sea unbridged, his walls defy

Both fiends and children of the sky,

Though at the fierce battalions' head

Lord Indra's self the onset led.

Yea, victory is thine before

The long bridge touch the farther shore,

So fleet and fierce and strong are these

Who limb them as their fancies please.

Away with grief and sad surmise

That mar the noblest enterprise,

And with their weak suspicion blight

The sage's plan, the hero's might.

Come, this degenerate weakness spurn,

And bid thy dauntless heart return,

For each fair hope by grief is crossed

When those we love are dead or lost.

Arise, O best of those who know,

Arm for the giant's overthrow.

None in the triple world I see

Who in the fight may equal thee;

None who before thy face may stand

And brave the bow that arms thy hand,

Trust to these mighty Vnars: they

With full success thy trust will pay,

When thou shalt reach the robber's hold,

And loving arms round St fold.'

Footnotes

427:
1b The Sixth Book is called in Sanskrit
"Yuddha-Knda" or "The War", and "Lank-Knda".
It is generally known at the present day by the latter title.

427:
2b Vyu is the God of Wind.

427:
3b Garuda the King of Birds.

427:4b Serpent-Gods.

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