Part 6

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II.

The Banishment - 37

VI. The King's Lament


[32]"Is this torturing dream or madness, do my feeble senses fail,
O'er my darkened mind and bosom doth a fainting fit prevail?"
So the stricken monarch pondered and in hushed and silent fear,
Looked on her as on a tigress looks the dazed and stricken deer,

Lying on the unswept pavement stillhe heaved the choking sigh,


Like a wild and hissing serpent quelled by incantations high!
Sobs convulsive shook his bosom and his speech and accent failed,
And a dark and deathlike faintness o'er his feeble soul prevailed,
Stunned awhile remained the monarch, then in furious passion woke,
And his eyeballs flamed with redfire, to the queen as thus he spoke,
"Traitress to thy king and husband, fell destroyer of thy race,
Wherefore seeks thy ruthless rancour Rama rich in righteous grace,
Traitress to thy kith and kindred, Rama loves thee as thy own,
Wherefore then with causeless vengeance as a mother hate thy son?
Have I courted thee. Kaikeyi, throned thee in my heart of truth,
Nursed thee in my home and bosom like a snake of poisoned tooth,

Have I courted thee, Kaikeyi, placed thee on Ayodhya's throne,


That my Rama, loved of people, thou shouldst banish from his own?
Banish far my Queen Kausalya, Queen Sumitra saintly wife,
Wrench from me my ancient empire, from my bosom wrench my life,
But with brave and princely Rama never can his father part,
Tillhis ancient life is ended, cold and still his beating heart!
|33)Sunless rollthe world in darkness, rainless may the harvests thrive,
But from righteous Rama severed, never can his sire survive,
Feeble is thy aged husband, few and brief on earth his day,
Lend me, wife, a woman's kindness, as a consort be my stay!

Ask for other boon, Kaikeyi, aught my sea-girt empire yields,


Wealth or treasure, gem or jewel, castled town or smiling fields,

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II. The Banishment - 38

shall be given,
Ask for other gift, Kaikeyi, and thy wishes of righteous Heaven!"
Stain me not with crime unholy in the eye
spake the Queen Kaikeyi: "If thy royal heart repent,
Coldly let thy royal faith be rent,
Break thy word and plighted promise,

known for truth and virtue, speak to peers and monarchs all,
Ever regions they shall gather in thy hall,
When from near and distant

please thee, monarch, of thy evil-destined wife.


Speak if so it
wife's devotion, how she served and saved thy life
How she loved with
plighted promise trusting for a humble boon she sighed,
died!*"
How on promise, how a cheated woman
How a monarch broke his
face,
form," resumed the monarch, "beauty dwells upon thy grace,
"Fair thy thee, and a woman's peerless
Woman's winsome charms bedeck
within thy bosom wakes this thought of cruel wile.guile?
Wherefore then blackest
dark and loathsome spirit stains thy heart with
And what
day, Kaikeyi, when a gentle bride you came,
Ever since the have won a woman's fame,
unfailing duty you
By a wife's defiled,
cruel purpose hath a stainless heart
Wherefore now this to the dark and pathless
wild?
to send my Rama
Ruthless wish
purpose bent,
darkly-scheming woman, on unrighteous
Wherefore, seek a vent,
causeless vengeance on my Rama
Doth thy cruel
thy son the throne to win,
deeds unholy for
seek by
|34|WhereforeBharat covet, blackened by his mother's sin?
doth not
Throne which
garb of woe,
banished Rama mantled in the
Shall I see my pathless jungle go,
and empire to the
Reft of home and kin
sweeping o'er my empire dark and deep.
Shall I see disasters army sweep?
foeman o'er a scattered
As the forces of a say,
monarchs in their whispered voices
assembled holds his sway.
Shall Ihear his dotage, Dasa-ratha
Weak and foolish in
done.
when they blame my action son?
elders my
Shall I say to righteous
mandate driven I have
banished thus
That by woman's

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II. The Banishment -39

Queen Kausalya, dear-loved woman! she who serves me as a slave,


Soothes me like a tender sister, helps me like a consort brave,
As a fond and loving mother tends me with a watchful care,
As a daughter ever duteous doth obeisance sweet and fair,

When my fond and fair Kausalya asks me of her banished son,


How shall Dasa-ratha answer for the impious action done,
How can husband, cold and cruel, break a wife's confiding heart,
How can father, false and faithless, from his best and eldest part?"m
Coldly spake the Queen Kaikeyi: "If thy royal heart repent,
Break thy word and plighted promise, let thy royal faith be rent,
Truth-abiding is our monarch, so I heard the people say,
And his word is all inviolate, stainless virtue marks his sway,

Let it now be known to nations, - righteous Dasa-ratha lied,


And a trusting, cheated woman broke her loving heart and died!"
Darker grew the shades of midnight, coldly shone each distant star,
Wilder in the monarch's bosom raged the struggle and the war:
"Starry midnight, robed in shadows! give my wearied heart relief,
Spread thy sable covering mantle o'er an impious monarch's grief,
|35| Spread thy vast and inky darkness o'er a deed of nameless crime,
Reign perennial o'er my sorrows heedless of the lapse of time,
May a sinful monarch perish ere the dawning of the day,
O'er a dark life sin-polluted, beam not morning's righteous ray!"

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