Rámáyan of Válmíki (World's Classics Series). Valmiki

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Rámáyan of Válmíki (World's Classics Series) - Valmiki


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      Disease or famine ne’er oppressed

      His happy people, richly blest

      With all the joys of ample wealth,

      Of sweet content and perfect health.

      No widow mourned her well-loved mate,

      No sire his son’s untimely fate.

      They feared not storm or robber’s hand;

      No fire or flood laid waste the land:

      To bless the days of Ráma’s reign.

      From him, the great and glorious king,

      Shall many a princely scion spring.

      And he shall rule, beloved by men,

      And when his life on earth is past

      To Brahmá‘s world shall go at last.”

      Whoe’er this noble poem reads

      That tells the tale of Ráma’s deeds,

      Good as the Scriptures, he shall be

      From every sin and blemish free.

      Whoever reads the saving strain,

      With all his kin the heavens shall gain.

      Bráhmans who read shall gather hence

      The highest praise for eloquence.

      The warrior, o’er the land shall reign,

      The merchant, luck in trade obtain;

      Ὅς ἤδη τ’ ἐόντα, τά τ’ ἐσσόμενα,

      πρό τ’ ἐόντα.

      “That sacred seer, whose comprehensive view,

      The past, the present, and the future knew.”

      The Bombay edition reads trilokajǹa, who knows the three worlds (earth, air and heaven.) “It is by tapas (austere fervour) that rishis of subdued souls, subsisting on roots, fruits and air, obtain a vision of the three worlds with all things moving and stationary.” Manu, XI. 236.

      “As the language of the Veda, the Sanskrit, is the most ancient type of the English of the present day, (Sanskrit and English are but varieties of one and the same language,) so its thoughts and feelings contain in reality the first roots and germs of that intellectual growth which by an unbroken chain connects our own generation with the ancestors of the Aryan race — with those very people who at the rising and setting of the sun listened with trembling hearts to the songs of the Veda, that told them of bright powers above, and of a life to come after the sun of their own lives had set in the clouds of the evening. These men were the true ancestors of our race, and the Veda is the oldest book we have in which to study the first beginnings of our language, and of


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