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

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


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cot Válmíki hied

      Not far remote from Gangá‘s tide.

      He stood and saw the ripples roll

      Pellucid o’er a pebbly shoal.

      He turned in ecstasy, and cried:

      “See, pupil dear, this lovely sight,

      The smooth-floored shallow, pure and bright,

      With not a speck or shade to mar,

      And clear as good men’s bosoms are.

      Here on the brink thy pitcher lay,

      And bring my zone of bark, I pray.

      Here will I bathe: the rill has not,

      To lave the limbs, a fairer spot.

      Do quickly as I bid, nor waste

      The precious time; away, and haste.”

      Obedient to his master’s hest

      Quick from the cot he brought the vest;

      The hermit took it from his hand,

      And tightened round his waist the band;

      Then duly dipped and bathed him there,

      And muttered low his secret prayer.

      To spirits and to Gods he made

      Libation of the stream, and strayed

      Viewing the forest deep and wide

      That spread its shade on every side.

      Close by the bank he saw a pair

      Of curlews sporting fearless there.

      But suddenly with evil mind

      An outcast fowler stole behind,

      And, with an aim too sure and true,

      The male bird near the hermit slew.

      The wretched hen in wild despair

      With fluttering pinions beat the air,

      And shrieked a long and bitter cry

      When low on earth she saw him lie,

      Her loved companion, quivering, dead,

      His dear wings with his lifeblood red;

      And for her golden crested mate

      She mourned, and was disconsolate.

      The hermit saw the slaughtered bird,

      And all his heart with ruth was stirred.

      The fowler’s impious deed distressed

      His gentle sympathetic breast,

      And while the curlew’s sad cries rang

      Within his ears, the hermit sang:

      “No fame be thine for endless time,

      Because, base outcast, of thy crime,

      Whose cruel hand was fain to slay

      One of this gentle pair at play!”

      E’en as he spoke his bosom wrought

      And laboured with the wondering thought

      What was the speech his ready tongue

      Had uttered when his heart was wrung.

      He pondered long upon the speech,

      Recalled the words and measured each,

      And thus exclaimed the saintly guide

      To Bharadvája by his side:

      “With equal lines of even feet,

      With rhythm and time and tone complete,

      The measured form of words I spoke

      And Bharadvája, nothing slow

      His faithful love and zeal to show,

      Answered those words of wisdom, “Be

      The name, my lord, as pleases thee.”

      As rules prescribe the hermit took

      Some lustral water from the brook.

      But still on this his constant thought

      Kept brooding, as his home he sought;

      While Bharadvája paced behind,

      A pupil sage of lowly mind,

      And in his hand a pitcher bore

      With pure fresh water brimming o’er.

      Soon as they reached their calm retreat

      The holy hermit took his seat;

      His mind from worldly cares recalled,

      And mused in deepest thought enthralled.

      Creator of the earth and sky,

      The four-faced God, to meet the sage

      Came to Válmíki’s hermitage.

      Soon as the mighty God he saw,

      Up sprang the saint in wondering awe.

      Mute, with clasped hands, his head he bent,

      And stood before him reverent.

      His honoured guest he greeted well,

      Who bade him of his welfare tell;

      Gave water for his blessed feet,

      In honoured place the God Most High

      Sate down, and bade the saint sit nigh.

      There sate before Válmíki’s eyes

      The Father of the earth and skies;

      But still the hermit’s thoughts were bent

      On one thing only, all intent

      On that poor curlew’s mournful fate

      Lamenting for her slaughtered mate;

      And still his lips, in absent mood,

      The verse that told his grief, renewed:

      “Woe to the fowler’s impious hand

      That did the deed that folly planned;

      That could to needless death devote

      The curlew of the tuneful throat!”

      The heavenly Father smiled in glee,

      And said, “O best of hermits, see,

      A verse, unconscious, thou hast made;

      No longer be the task delayed.

      Seek not to trace, with labour vain,

      The unpremeditated strain.

      The tuneful lines thy lips rehearsed

      Spontaneous from thy bosom burst.

      Then come, O best of seers, relate

      The life


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