[Nala and Damayanti and Other Poems by Henry Hart Milman]@TWC D-Link bookNala and Damayanti and Other Poems BOOK XIII 1/1
BOOK XIII. [93]This, the lovely princess hearing--from the captain of the band, With the caravan set forward--seeking still her royal lord. Long their journey through the forest--through the dark and awful glens; Then a lake of loveliest beauty--fragrant with the lotus flowers, Saw those merchants, wide and pleasant--with fresh grass and shady trees; Flowers and fruits bedecked its borders--where the birds melodious sang: In its clear delicious waters--soul-enchanting, icy cool, With their horses all o'erwearied--thought they then to plunge and bathe; At the signal of the captain--entered all that pleasant grove. At the close of day arriving--there encamped they for the night. When the midnight came, all noiseless--came in silence deep and still, Weary slept the band of merchants--lo, a herd of elephants,[94] Oozing moisture from their temples--came to drink the troubled stream. When that caravan they gazed on--with their slumbering beasts at rest, The tame elephants they scented--those wild forest elephants; Forward rush they fleet and furious--mad to slay, and wild with heat; Irresistible the onset--of the rushing ponderous beasts, As the peaks from some high mountain--down the valley thundering roll; Strewn was all the way before them--with the boughs, the trunks of trees; On they crash'd to where the travellers--slumbered by the lotus lake. Trampled down without a struggle--helpless on the earth they lay, "Woe, oh, woe!" shrieked out the merchants--wildly some began to fly, In the forest thickets' plunging;--some stood gasping, blind with sleep; And the elephants down beat them--with their tusks, their trunks, their feet. Many saw their camels dying--mingled with the men on foot, And in frantic tumult rushing--wildly struck each other down; Many miserably shrieking--cast them down upon the earth, Many climbed the trees in terror--on the rough ground stumbled some. Thus in various wise and fatal--by the elephants assailed, Lay that caravan so wealthy--scattered all abroad or slain. Such, so fearful was the tumult--the three worlds seemed all appalled,[95] "'Tis a fire amid th' encampment--save ye, fly ye, for your lives. Lo, your precious pearls ye trample--take them up, why fly so fast? Save them, 'tis a common venture--fear ye not that I deceive." Thus t' each other shrieked the merchants--as in fear they scattered round. "Yet again I call upon you--cowards! think ye what ye do." All around this frantic carnage--raging through the prostrate host, Damayanti, soon awakened--with her heart all full of dread; There she saw a hideous slaughter--the whole world might well appal. To such sights all unfamiliar--gazed the queen with lotus eyes, Pressing in her breath with terror--slowly rose she on her feet. And the few that scaped the carnage--few that scaped without a wound, All at once exclaimed together--"Of whose deeds is this the doom? Hath not mighty Manibhadra--adoration meet received. And Vaisravana the holy[96]--of the Yakshas lord and king, Have not all that might impede us--ere we journied, been addressed? Was it doomed, that all good omens--by this chance should be belied! Were no planets haply adverse ?--how hath fate, like this, befall'n!" Others answered in their misery--reft of kindred and of wealth, "Who is that ill-omened woman--that with maniac-staring eyes, Joined our host, misshaped in aspect--and with scarcely human form? Surely all this wicked witchcraft--by her evil power is wrought; Witch or sorceress she, or daemon--fatal cause of all our fears, Hers is all the guilt, the misery--who such damning proof may doubt? Could we but behold that false one--murtheress, bane of all our host, With the clods, the dust, the bamboos--with our staves, or with our hands, We would slay her on the instant--of our caravan the fate." But no sooner Damayanti--their appalling words had heard, In her shame and in her terror--to the forest shade she fled. And that guilt imputed dreading--thus her fate began to wail: "Woe is me, still o'er me hovers--the terrific wrath of fate; No good fortune e'er attends me--of what guilt is this the doom? Not a sin can I remember--not the least to living man. Or in deed, or thought, or language--of what guilt is this the doom? In some former life committed[97]--expiate I now the sin. To this infinite misfortune--hence by penal justice doomed? Lost my husband, lost my kingdom--from my kindred separate; Separate from noble Nala--from my children far away, Widowed of my rightful guardian--in the serpent-haunted wood." Of that caravan at morning--then the sad surviving few, Setting forth from that dread region--o'er that hideous carnage grieve; Each a brother mourns, or father--or a son, or dearest friend, Still Vidarbha's princess uttered--"What the sin that I have done? Scarcely in this desert forest--had I met this host of men, By the elephants they perish--this is through my luckless fate; A still lengthening life of sorrow--I henceforth must sadly lead. Ere his destined day none dieth--this of aged seers the lore; Therefore am not I too trampled--by this herd of furious beasts. Every deed of living mortal--by over-ruling fate is done. Yet no sin have I committed--in my blameless infancy, To deserve this dire disaster--or in word, or deed, or thought. For the choosing of my husband--are the guardians of the world, Angry are the gods, rejected--for the noble Nala's sake? From my lord this long divorcement--through their power do I endure." Thus the noblest of all women--to bewail her fate began, The deserted Damayanti--with these sad and bitter words; With some Veda-reading Brahmins--that survived that scattered host, Then she went her way in sadness--like the young moon's sickle pale, And ere long a mighty city--that afflicted queen drew near: 'Twas the king of Chedi's city--truth-discerning Subahu. Scantly clad in half a garment--entered she that stately town; Her disturbed, emaciate, wretched--with dishevelled hair, unwashed, Like a maniac, onward-moving--saw that city's wondering throng; Gazing on her as she entered--to the monarch's royal seat; All the boys her footsteps followed--in their curious gamesome play;[98] Circled round by these she wandered--near the royal palace gate. From that palace lofty terrace--her the mother of the king Saw, and thus her nurse addressed she--"Go, and lead that wanderer in! Sad she roves, without a refuge--troubled by those gazing men; Yet in form so bright, irradiate--is our palace where she moves. Though so maniac-like, half-clothed--like Heaven's long-eyed queen she seems." She those crowding men dispersing--quickly to the palace top Made her mount--and in amazement--her the mother-queen addressed: "Thus though bowed and worn with sorrow--such a shining form thou wear'st, As through murky clouds the lightning--tell me who thou art and whence: For thy form is more than human--of all ornament despoiled: Men thou fear'st not, unattended--in celestial beauty safe." Hearing thus her gentle language--Bhima's daughter made reply, "Know me like thyself a mortal--a distressed, devoted wife; Of illustrious race an handmaid--making where I will mine home; On the roots and wild-fruits feeding--lonely, at the fall of eve. Gifted with unnumber'd virtues--is my true, my faithful lord, And I still the hero followed--like his shadow on the way. 'Twas his fate, with desp'rate fondness--to pursue the love of play, And in play subdued and ruined--entered he yon lonely wood; Him, arrayed in but one garment,--like a madman wandering wild, To console my noble husband--I too entered the deep wood; He within that dreary forest--for some cause, to me unknown, Wild with hunger, reft of reason--that one single robe he lost. I with but one robe, him naked[99]--frantic, and with mind diseased, Following through the boundless forest--many a night I had not slept; Then, when I had sunk to slumber--me the blameless leaving there, Half my garment having severed--he his sinless consort fled; Seeking him, my outcast husband--night and day am I consumed: Him I see not, ever shining--like the lotus cup, beloved; Find him not, most like th' immortals--lord of all, my life, my soul." Even as thus, with eyes o'erflowing--uttered she her sad lament, Sad herself, sad Bhima's daughter--did the mother queen address: "Dwell with me, then, noble Lady--deep the joy in thee I feel, And the servants of my household--shall thy royal husband seek; Haply hither he may wander--as he roams about the world: Dwelling here in peace and honour--thou thy husband wilt rejoin." To the king of Chedi's mother--Damayanti made reply; "On these terms, O nurse of heroes!--I with thee may make abode: That I eat not broken victuals[100]--wash not feet with menial hand:[101] Nor with stranger men have converse--in my chaste, secluded state; If that any man demand me--be he punished; if again, Be he put to death on th' instant--this the vow that I have sworn. Only, if they seek my husband--holy Brahmins will I see. Be my terms by thee accepted--gladly will I sojourn here, But on other terms no sojourn--will this heart resolved admit." Then to her with joyful spirit--spake the mother of the king: "As thou wilt shall all be ordered--be thou blest, since such thy vow." Speaking thus to Bhima's daughter--did the royal mother then, In these words address her daughter--young Sunanda was her name: "See this handmaid, my Sunanda--gifted with a form divine; She in age thy lovely compeer--be she to thee as a friend; Joined with her in sweet communion--take thy pleasure without fear." Young Sunanda, all rejoicing--to her own abode went back, Taking with her Damayanti--circled with her virgin peers..
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