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| Canto XIV. Ravan Doomed. | |
| The circling year had filled its course, | |
| And back was brought the wandering horse: | |
| Then upon Sarjú's northern strand | |
| Began the rite the king had planned. | |
| With Rishyaśring the forms to guide, | |
| The Brahmans to their task applied, | |
| At that great offering of the steed | |
| Their lofty-minded king decreed. | |
| The priests, who all the Scripture knew, | |
| Performed their part in order due, | |
| And circled round in solemn train | |
| As precepts of the law ordain. | |
| Pravargya rites92 were duly sped: | |
| For Upasads93 the flames were fed. | |
| Then from the plant94 the juice was squeezed, | |
| And those high saints with minds well pleased | |
| Performed the mystic rites begun | |
| With bathing ere the rise of sun | |
| They gave the portion Indra's claim, | |
| And hymned the King whom none can blame. | |
| The mid-day bathing followed next, | |
| Observed as bids the holy text. | |
| Then the good priests with utmost care, | |
| In form that Scripture's rules declare, | |
| For the third time pure water shed | |
| On high souled Daśaratha's head. | |
| Then Rishyaśring and all the rest | |
| To Indra and the Gods addressed | |
| Their sweet-toned hymn of praise and prayer, | |
| And called them in the rite to share. | |
| With sweetest song and hymn entoned | |
| They gave the Gods in heaven enthroned, | |
| As duty bids, the gifts they claim, | |
| The holy oil that feeds the flame. | |
| And many an offering there was paid, | |
| And not one slip in all was made. | |
| For with most careful heed they saw | |
| That all was done by Veda law. | |
| None, all those days, was seen oppressed | |
| By hunger or by toil distressed. | |
| Why speak of human kind? No beast | |
| Was there that lacked an ample feast. | |
| For there was store for all who came, | |
| For orphan child and lonely dame; | |
| The old and young were well supplied, | |
| The poor and hungry satisfied. | |
| Throughout the day ascetics fed, | |
| And those who roam to beg their bread: | |
| While all around the cry was still, | |
| “Give forth, give forth,” and “Eat your fill.” | |
| “Give forth with liberal hand the meal, | |
| And various robes in largess deal.” | |
| Urged by these cries on every side | |
| Unweariedly their task they plied: | |
| And heaps of food like hills in size | |
| In boundless plenty met the eyes: | |
| And lakes of sauce, each day renewed, | |
| Refreshed the weary multitude. | |
| And strangers there from distant lands, | |
| And women folk in crowded bands | |
| The best of food and drink obtained | |
| At the great rite the king ordained. | |
| Apart from all, the Brahmans there, | |
| Thousands on thousands, took their share | |
| Of various dainties sweet to taste, | |
| On plates of gold and silver placed, | |
| All ready set, as, when they willed, | |
| The twice-born men their places filled. | |
| And servants in fair garments dressed | |
| Waited upon each Brahman guest. | |
| Of cheerful mind and mien were they, | |
| With gold and jewelled earrings gay. | |
| The best of Brahmans praised the fare | |
| Of countless sorts, of flavour rare: | |
| And thus to Raghu's son they cried: | |
| “We bless thee, and are satisfied.” | |
| Between the rites some Brahmans spent | |
| The time in learned argument, | |
| [pg 023] | |
| With ready flow of speech, sedate, | |
| And keen to vanquish in debate.95 | |
| There day by day the holy train | |
| Performed all rites as rules ordain. | |
| No priest in all that host was found | |
| But kept the vows that held him bound: | |
| None, but the holy Vedas knew, | |
| And all their six-fold science96 too. | |
| No Brahman there was found unfit | |
| To speak with eloquence and wit. | |
| And now the appointed time came near | |
| The sacrificial posts to rear. | |
| They brought them, and prepared to fix | |
| Of Bel97 and Khadir98 six and six; | |
| Six, made of the Palaśa99 tree, | |
| Of Fig-wood one, apart to be: | |
| Of Sleshmat100 and of Devadar101 | |
| One column each, the mightiest far: | |
| So thick the two, the arms of man | |
| Their ample girth would fail to span. | |
| All these with utmost care were wrought | |
| By hand of priests in Scripture taught, | |
| And all with gold were gilded bright | |
| To add new splendour to the rite: | |
| Twenty-and-one those stakes in all, | |
| Each one-and-twenty cubits tall: | |
| And one-and-twenty ribbons there | |
| Hung on the pillars, bright and fair. | |
| Firm in the earth they stood at last, | |
| Where cunning craftsmen fixed them fast; | |
| And there unshaken each remained, | |
| Octagonal and smoothly planed. | |
| Then ribbons over all were hung, | |
| And flowers and scent around them flung. | |
| Thus decked they cast a glory forth | |
| Like the great saints who star the north.102 | |
| The sacrificial altar then | |
| Was raised by skilful twice-born men, | |
| In shape and figure to behold | |
| An eagle with his wings of gold, | |
| With twice nine pits and formed three-fold | |
| Each for some special God, beside | |
| The pillars were the victims tied; | |
| The birds that roam the wood, the air, | |
| The water, and the land were there, | |
| And snakes and things of reptile birth, | |
| And healing herbs that spring from earth: | |
| As texts prescribe, in Scripture found, | |
| Three hundred victims there were bound. | |
| The steed devoted to the host | |
| Of Gods, the gem they honour most, | |
| Was duly sprinkled. Then the Queen | |
| Kauśalya, with delighted mien, | |
| With reverent steps around him paced, | |
| And with sweet wreaths the victim graced; | |
| Then with three swords in order due | |
| She smote the steed with joy, and slew. | |
| That night the queen, a son to gain, | |
| With calm and steady heart was fain | |
| By the dead charger's side to stay | |
| From evening till the break of day. | |
| Then came three priests, their care to lead | |
| The other queens to touch the steed, | |
| Upon Kauśalya to attend, | |
| Their company and aid to lend. | |
| As by the horse she still reclined, | |
| With happy mien and cheerful mind, | |
| With Rishyaśring the twice-born came | |
| And praised and blessed the royal dame. | |
| The priest who well his duty knew, | |
| And every sense could well subdue, | |
| From out the bony chambers freed | |
| And boiled the marrow of the steed. | |
| Above the steam the monarch bent, | |
| And, as he smelt the fragrant scent, | |
| In time and order drove afar | |
| All error that his hopes could mar. | |
| Then sixteen priests together came | |
| And cast into the sacred flame | |
| The severed members of the horse, | |
| Made ready all in ordered course. | |
| On piles of holy Fig-tree raised | |
| [pg 024] | |
| The meaner victims' bodies blazed: | |
| The steed, of all the creatures slain, | |
| Alone required a pile of cane. | |
| Three days, as is by law decreed, | |
| Lasted that Offering of the Steed. | |
| The Chatushṭom began the rite, | |
| And when the sun renewed his light, | |
| The Ukthya followed: after came | |
| The Atiratra's holy flame. | |
| These were the rites, and many more | |
| Arranged by light of holy lore, | |
| The Aptoryam of mighty power, | |
| And, each performed in proper hour, | |
| The Abhijit and Viśvajit | |
| With every form and service fit; | |
| And with the sacrifice at night | |
| The Jyotishṭom and ayus rite.103 | |
| The task was done, as laws prescribe: | |
| The monarch, glory of his tribe, | |
| Bestowed the land in liberal grants | |
| Upon the sacred ministrants. | |
| He gave the region of the east, | |
| His conquest, to the Hotri priest. | |
| The west, the celebrant obtained: | |
| The south, the priest presiding gained: | |
| The northern region was the share | |
| Of him who chanted forth the prayer,104 | |
| Thus did each priest obtain his meed | |
| At the great Slaughter of the Steed, | |
| Ordained, the best of all to be, | |
| By self-existent deity. | |
| Ikshvaku's son with joyful mind | |
| This noble fee to each assigned, | |
| But all the priests with one accord | |
| Addressed that unpolluted lord: | |
| “Tis thine alone to keep the whole | |
| Of this broad earth in firm control. | |
| [pg 025] | |
| No gift of lands from thee we seek: | |
| To guard these realms our hands were weak. | |
| On sacred lore our days are spent: | |
| Let other gifts our wants content.” | |
| The chief of old Ikshvaku's line | |
| Gave them ten hundred thousand kine, | |
| A hundred millions of fine gold, | |
| The same in silver four times told. | |
| But every priest in presence there | |
| With one accord resigned his share. | |
| To Saint Vaśishṭha, high of soul, | |
| And Rishyaśring they gave the whole. | |
| That largess pleased those Brahmans well, | |
| Who bade the prince his wishes tell. | |
| Then Daśaratha, mighty king, | |
| Made answer thus to Rishyaśring: | |
| “O holy Hermit, of thy grace, | |
| Vouchsafe the increase of my race.” | |
| He spoke; nor was his prayer denied: | |
| The best of Brahmans thus replied: | |
| “Four sons, O Monarch, shall be thine, | |
| Upholders of thy royal line.” |