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| Canto LXII. Dasaratha Consoled. | |
| When, best of all who give delight, | |
| Her Rama wandered far from sight, | |
| Kauśalya weeping, sore distressed, | |
| The king her husband thus addressed: | |
| “Thy name, O Monarch, far and wide | |
| Through the three worlds is glorified: | |
| Yet Rama's is the pitying mind, | |
| His speed is true, his heart is kind. | |
| How will thy sons, good lord, sustain | |
| With Síta, all their care and pain? | |
| How in the wild endure distress, | |
| Nursed in the lap of tenderness? | |
| How will the dear Videhan bear | |
| The heat and cold when wandering there | |
| Bred in the bliss of princely state, | |
| So young and fair and delicate? | |
| The large-eyed lady, wont to eat | |
| The best of finely seasoned meat— | |
| How will she now her life sustain | |
| With woodland fare of self-sown grain? | |
| Will she, with joys encompassed long, | |
| Who loved the music and the song, | |
| In the wild wood endure to hear | |
| The ravening lion's voice of fear? | |
| Where sleeps my strong-armed hero, where, | |
| [pg 167] | |
| Like Lord Mahendra's standard, fair? | |
| Where is, by Lakshman's side, his bed, | |
| His club-like arm beneath his head? | |
| When shall I see his flower-like eyes, | |
| And face that with the lotus vies, | |
| Feel his sweet lily breath, and view | |
| His glorious hair and lotus hue? | |
| The heart within my breast, I feel, | |
| Is adamant or hardest steel, | |
| Or, in a thousand fragments split, | |
| The loss of him had shattered it, | |
| When those I love, who should be blest, | |
| Are wandering in the wood distressed, | |
| Condemned their wretched lives to lead | |
| In exile, by thy ruthless deed. | |
| If, when the fourteen years are past, | |
| Rama reseeks his home at last, | |
| I think not Bharat will consent | |
| To yield the wealth and government. | |
| At funeral feasts some mourners deal | |
| To kith and kin the solemn meal, | |
| And having duly fed them all | |
| Some Brahmans to the banquet call. | |
| The best of Brahmans, good and wise, | |
| The tardy summoning despise, | |
| And, equal to the Gods, disdain | |
| Cups, e'en of Amrit, thus to drain. | |
| Nay e'en when Brahmans first have fed, | |
| They loathe the meal for others spread, | |
| And from the leavings turn with scorn, | |
| As bulls avoid a fractured horn. | |
| So Rama, sovereign lord of men, | |
| Will spurn the sullied kingship then: | |
| He born the eldest and the best, | |
| His younger's leavings will detest, | |
| Turning from tasted food away, | |
| As tigers scorn another's prey. | |
| The sacred post is used not twice, | |
| Nor elements, in sacrifice. | |
| But once the sacred grass is spread, | |
| But once with oil the flame is fed: | |
| So Rama's pride will ne'er receive | |
| The royal power which others leave, | |
| Like wine when tasteless dregs are left, | |
| Or rites of Soma juice bereft. | |
| Be sure the pride of Raghu's race | |
| Will never stoop to such disgrace: | |
| The lordly lion will not bear | |
| That man should beard him in his lair. | |
| Were all the worlds against him ranged | |
| His dauntless soul were still unchanged: | |
| He, dutiful, in duty strong, | |
| Would purge the impious world from wrong. | |
| Could not the hero, brave and bold, | |
| The archer, with his shafts of gold, | |
| Burn up the very seas, as doom | |
| Will in the end all life consume? | |
| Of lion's might, eyed like a bull, | |
| A prince so brave and beautiful, | |
| Thou hast with wicked hate pursued, | |
| Like sea-born tribes who eat their brood. | |
| If thou, O Monarch, hadst but known | |
| The duty all the Twice-born own, | |
| If the good laws had touched thy mind, | |
| Which sages in the Scriptures find, | |
| Thou ne'er hadst driven forth to pine | |
| This brave, this duteous son of thine. | |
| First on her lord the wife depends, | |
| Next on her son and last on friends: | |
| These three supports in life has she, | |
| And not a fourth for her may be. | |
| Thy heart, O King, I have not won; | |
| In wild woods roams my banished son; | |
| Far are my friends: ah, hapless me, | |
| Quite ruined and destroyed by thee.” |