Chapter
CI.
Then Mṛigánkadatta,
refreshed by breaking his fast, sat down with those ministers of his on the bank
of that lake. Then he courteously asked those four ministers, whom he had
recovered that day, for an account of their adventures during the time that he
was separated from them. Thereupon that one of them, who was called
Vyághrasena, said to him, “Listen, prince, I now proceed to relate our
adventures. When I was carried to a distance from you by the curse of the Nága
Párávatáksha, I lost my senses, and in that state I wandered through the forest
by night. At last I recovered consciousness, but the darkness, which enveloped
me, prevented me from seeing where the cardinal points lay, and what path I
ought to take. At last the night, that grief made long, came to an end; and in
course of time the sun arose, that mighty god, and revealed all the quarters of
the heaven. Then I said to myself ‘Alas! Where can that master of mine be gone?
And how will he manage to exist here alone separated from us? And how am I to
recover him? Where shall I look for him? What course shall I adopt? I had
better go to Ujjayiní; for I may perhaps find him there; for he must go there,
to find Śaśánkavatí.’ With such hopes I set out slowly for Ujjayiní, threading
that difficult forest that resembled calamity, scorched by the rays of the sun,
that resembled showers of fiery powder.
“And at
last, somehow or other, I reached a lake, with full-blown lotuses for expanded
eyes, that seemed to hold converse with me by means of the sweet cries of its
swans and other water-birds; it stretched forth its ripples like hands; its
surface was calm and broad; the very sight of it took away all grief; and so in
all points it resembled a good man. I bathed in it, and ate lotus-fibres, and
drank water; and while I was lingering on its bank, I saw these three arrive
there, Dṛiḍhamushṭi, and Sthúlabáhu, and Meghabala. And when we met, we asked
one another for tidings of you. And as none of us knew anything about you, and
we suspected the worst, we made up our minds to abandon the body, being unable
to endure separation from you.
“And at
that moment a hermit-boy came to bathe in that lake; his name was Mahátapas,
and he was the son of Dírghatapas. He had matted hair, he diffused a brightness
of his own, and he seemed like the god of Fire, blazing with mighty flame,
having become incarnate in the body of a Bráhman, in order to consume once more
the Kháṇḍava forest; he was clothed in the skin of a black antelope, he had an
ascetic’s water-vessel in his left hand, and on his right wrist he bore a
rosary of Aksha-seeds by way of a bracelet; the perfumed earth that he used in
bathing was stuck on the horns of the deer that came with him, and he was
accompanied by some other hermit-boys like himself. The moment he saw us about
to throw ourselves into the lake, he came towards us; for the good are easily
melted with compassion, and shew causeless friendship to all. And he said to
us, ‘You ought not to commit a crime characteristic of cowards, for poltroons,
with their minds blinded with grief, fall into the gulfs of calamity, but
resolute men, having eyes enlightened by discernment, behold the right path,
and do not fall into the pit, but assuredly attain their goal. And you, being
men of auspicious appearance, will no doubt attain prosperity; so tell me, what
is your grief? For it grieves my heart to see you thus.’
“When the
hermit-boy had said this, I at once told him the whole of our adventure from
the beginning; then that boy, who could read the future, and his companions,
exhorted us with various speeches, and diverted our minds from suicide. Then
the hermit-boy, after he had bathed, took us to his father’s hermitage, which
was at no great distance, to entertain us.
“There that
hermit’s son bestowed on us the arghya, and made us sit down in a place, in
which even the trees seemed to have entered on a course of penance, for they
stood aloft on platforms of earth, and lifted on high their branches like arms,
and drank in the rays of the sun. And then he went and asked all the trees in
the hermitage, one after another, for alms. And in a moment his alms-vessel was
filled with fruits, that of themselves dropped from the trees; and he came back
with it to us. And he gave us those fruits of heavenly flavour, and when we had
eaten them, we became, as it were, satisfied with nectar.
“And when
the day came to an end, and the sun descended into the sea, and the sky was
filled with stars, as if with spray flung up by his fall, and the moon, having
put on a white bark-robe of moonlight, had gone to the ascetic grove on the top
of the eastern mountain, as if desiring to withdraw from the world on account
of the fall of the sun, we went to see the hermits, who had finished all their
duties, and were sitting together in a certain part of the hermitage. We bowed
before them, and sat down, and those great sages welcomed us, and with kindly
words at once asked us whence we came. Then that hermit-boy told them our
history until the time of our entering the hermitage. Then a wise hermit there,
of the name of Kanva, said to us, ‘Come, why have you allowed yourselves to
become so dispirited, being, as you are, men of valour? For it is the part of a
brave man to display unbroken firmness in calamity, and freedom from arrogance
in success, and never to abandon fortitude. And great men attain the title of
great by struggling through great difficulties by the aid of resolution, and
accomplishing great things. In illustration of this, listen to this story of
Sundarasena, and hear how he endured hardship for the sake of Mandáravatí?’
When the hermit Kanva had said this, he began, in the hearing of us and of all
the hermits, to tell the following tale.”
Story
of Sundarasena and Mandáravatí.
There is a
country named Nishada, that adorns the face of the northern quarter; in it
there was of old a city of the name of Alaká. In this city the people were
always happy in abundance of all things, and the only things that never enjoyed
repose were the jewel-lamps. In it there lived a king of the name of Mahásena,
and not without reason was he so named, for his enemies were all consumed by
the wonderful and terrible fire of his valour, which resembled that of the god
of war. That king had a prime minister named Guṇapálita, who was like a second
Śesha, for he was a mine of valour, and could bear up, like that serpent, the
weight of the earth. The king, having destroyed his enemies, laid upon him the
weight of his kingdom and devoted himself to pleasure; and then he had a son
born to him by his queen Śaśiprabhá, named Sundarasena. Even when he was a
child, he was no child in good qualities, and the goddesses of valour and
beauty chose him for their self-elected husband.
That prince
had five heroic ministers, equal in age and accomplishments, who had grown up
with him from their childhood, Chaṇḍaprabha, and Bhímabhuja, and
Vyághraparákrama, and the heroic Vikramaśakti, and the fifth was Dṛiḍhabuddhi.
And they were all men of great courage, endowed with strength and wisdom,
well-born, and devoted to their master, and they even understood the cries of
birds. And the prince lived with them in his father’s house without a suitable
wife, being unmarried, though he was grown up. And that heroic Sundarasena and
his ministers reflected, “Courage invincible in assault, and wealth won by his
own arm, and a wife equal to him in beauty become a hero on this earth. Otherwise,
what is the use of this beauty?”
And one day
the prince went out of the town to hunt, accompanied by his soldiers, and by
those five companions, and as he was going out, a certain famous female
mendicant named Kátyáyaní, bold from the maturity of her age, who had just
returned from a distant foreign country, saw him, and said to herself, when she
beheld his superhuman beauty, “Is this the Moon without Rohiṇí or the god of
Love without Rati?” But when she asked his attendants, and found out that it
was the prince, she was astonished, and praised the marvellousness of the
creation of the Disposer. Then she cried out to the prince from a distance with
a shrill and far reaching voice, “Be victorious, O prince,” and so saying she
bowed before him. But at that moment the mind of the prince was wholly occupied
by a conversation which he had begun with his ministers, and he went on without
hearing the female ascetic. But she was angry, and called out to him in such a
loud voice that he could not help hearing her, “Ho! prince! why do you not
listen to the blessing of such a one as I am? What king or prince is there on
the earth that does not honour me? But if your youth and other advantages
render you so proud now, it is certain that, if you obtain for a wife that
ornament of the world, the maiden Mandáravatí, the daughter of the king of
Hansadvípa, you will be too much puffed up with arrogance to listen to the
speech of Śiva, the great Indra, and other gods, much less to the words of
wretched men.”
When the
ascetic had said this, Sundarasena, being full of curiosity, called her to him,
and bent before her and propitiated her. And being anxious to question her, he
sent her under the care of his servants to rest in the house of his minister
Vikramaśakti. Then the prince went off, and after he had enjoyed the sport of
hunting, he returned to his palace, and said his daily prayers, and took his
food, and then he sent for the ascetic, and put the following question to her,
“Reverend mother, who is this maiden named Mandáravatí, that you spoke of
to-day? Tell me, for I feel great curiosity about her.”
When the
ascetic heard this, she said to him, “Listen, I will tell you the whole story.
I am in the habit of wandering about the whole of this earth and the islands,
for the sake of visiting sacred bathing-places and other holy spots. And in the
course of my travels I happened to visit Hansadvípa. There I saw the daughter
of king Mandáradeva, a suitable match for the sons of gods, not to be beheld by
those who have done evil works; she bears the name of Mandáravatí, and has a
form as charming as the presiding goddess of the garden of the gods; the sight
of her kindles love, and she seems like another moon all composed of nectar,
created by the Disposer. There is no other beauty on the earth equal to hers;
only you, prince, I think, emulate her wealth of loveliness. As for those who
have not seen her, their eyes are useless, and they have been born in vain.”
When the
prince heard this from the mouth of the female ascetic, he said, “Mother, how
are we to get a sight of her beauty, which is so surpassing?” When the female
ascetic heard this speech of his, she said, “I took such interest in her on
that occasion that I painted a picture of her on canvas; and I have it with me
in a bag; if you feel any curiosity about it, look at it.” When she had said
this, she took the picture of the lady out of the bag, and shewed it to the
gratified prince. And Sundarasena, when he beheld that maiden, who, though she
was present there only in a picture, seemed to be of romantic beauty, and like
a flowing forth of joy, immediately felt his limbs covered all over with hairs
erect from horripilation, as if he had been pierced with the dense arrows of
the god of the flowery bow. He remained motionless, hearing nothing, speaking
nothing, seeing nothing; and with his whole heart fixed on her, was for a long
time as if painted in a picture.
When the
prince’s ministers saw that, they said to that female ascetic, “Reverend
mother, paint prince Sundarasena on this piece of canvas, and let us have a
specimen of your skill in catching likenesses.” The moment she heard that, she
painted the prince on canvas. And when they saw that it was a striking
likeness, all, who were present there, said, “The reverend lady’s likenesses
exactly resemble the originals, for when one looks at this picture, one thinks
that one sees the prince himself; so the beauty of the princess Mandáravatí is
sure to be such as it is represented in the picture.”
When the
ministers had said this, prince Sundarasena took the two pictures, and being
pleased, honoured that female ascetic. And he dismissed with appropriate
honours that dweller in a lonely spot. And he entered the inner part of the
palace, carrying with him the picture of his beloved. He flung himself on a bed
and said to himself “Can this be my charmer’s face, or a moon that has purged
away the spot that defiles its beauty?” In this way he remained examining
Mandáravatí, limb by limb, though he had only her painted form before him: and
in this state he continued every day, abstaining from meat and drink; and so in
the course of a few days he was completely exhausted by the pain of love’s
fever.
When his
parents, Śaśiprabhá and Mahásena, found that out, they came of their own accord
and asked his friends the cause of his indisposition. And his companions told
them the whole story, as it had happened, how the daughter of the king of
Hansadvípa had come to be the cause of his complaint. Then Mahásena said to
Sundarasena, “My son, why do you so improperly conceal this attachment of
yours? For Mandáravatí is a pearl of maidens, and she will be a good match for
you. Besides, her father Mandáradeva is a great friend of mine. So why do you
torment yourself about a matter of this kind, which is quite becoming, and can
be easily arranged by an ambassador?” When king Mahásena had said this, he
deliberated, and sent off an ambassador named Surathadeva to Hansadvípa, to ask
for the daughter of king Mandáradeva. And he put into his hand the portrait of
Sundarasena, executed on canvas by that female ascetic, which shewed how
wonderfully handsome he was.
The
ambassador travelled quickly, and reached the city of king Mahendráditya on the
shore of the sea, named Śaśánkapura. There he embarked on a ship, and after
some days he reached the palace of king Mandáradeva in Hansadvípa. He was
announced by the wardens and entered the palace, and saw that king, and after
he had in due form delivered to him the present, he said to him, “Great
monarch, king Mahásena sends you this message, ‘Give your daughter to my son
Sundarasena; for a female ascetic, of the name of Kátyáyaní, made a portrait of
her, and brought it here, and shewed it to my son, as the picture of a pearl of
maidens. And as Sundarasena’s beauty so nearly resembled hers, I felt a desire
to have his form painted on canvas also, and herewith I send the picture. Look
at it. Moreover, my son, who is of such astonishing beauty, does not wish to be
married, unless he can find a wife that resembles him, and nobody but your
daughter is a match for him in appearance.’ This is the message the king
entrusted to me, when he put this portrait into my hand; look at it, king, let
the spring-flower creeper be united to the spring.”
When the
king heard this speech of the ambassador’s, he was delighted, and he sent for
his daughter Mandáravatí and the queen her mother. And in their company he
opened and looked at that portrait, and immediately he ceased to cherish the
proud thought, that there was no fitting match for his daughter on the earth.
And he said, “My daughter’s beauty will not have been created in vain, if she is
united to this prince. She does not look her best without him, nor is he
complete without her; what is the lotus-bed without the swan, and what is the
swan without the lotus-bed?”
When the
king said this, and the queen expressed her complete approbation of it,
Mandáravatí suddenly became bewildered with love. She remained with her wide
expanded eyes immoveably fixed on the picture, as if possessed, as if asleep,
(though she was wide awake,) as if herself a painting. Then Mandáradeva, seeing
his daughter in that state, consented to give her in marriage, and he honoured
that ambassador.
And on the
next day the king sent off his counter-ambassador, who was a Bráhman named
Kumáradatta, to king Mahásena. And he said to the two ambassadors, “Go quickly
to that king Mahásena, the lord of Alaká, and say to him from me, ‘I give you
my daughter out of friendship; so tell me, will your son come here, or shall I
send my daughter to you?’” When the two ambassadors had received this message
from the king, they immediately started off together on the sea in a ship; and
they reached Śaśánkapura, and thence they travelled by land, and reached that
opulent city of Alaká, which seemed like the original Alaká. They went to the
king’s palace, and entered it with the usual courtesies, and saw king Mahásena
who welcomed them. And they told that king the answer which Mandáradeva
entrusted to them; and when the king heard it, he was pleased, and shewed both
of them great honour.
Then the
king found out the star, under which the princess was born, from her father’s
ambassador; and he asked his astrologers when a favourable time would arrive
for the marriage of his son. And they answered that an auspicious time would
present itself in three months for bridegroom and bride, on the fifth day of
the white fortnight of the month Kártika. And so the king of Alaká informed
Mandáradeva that the marriage ought to take place on that day, and that he
would send his son, and this he wrote in a letter, and committed it to the care
of the ambassador Kumáradatta, and another ambassador of his own named
Chandrasvámin. So the ambassadors departed, and gave the letter as they were
directed, and told the king of Hansadvípa all that had taken place. The king
approved, and after honouring Chandrasvámin, the ambassador of Mahásena, he
sent him back to his master. And he returned to Alaká, and reported that the
business was satisfactorily settled; and then all on both sides remained
eagerly expecting the auspicious day.
And in the
meanwhile Mandáravatí in Hansadvípa, who had long ago fallen in love with the
prince from seeing his picture, thought that the auspicious day for the
marriage was a long way off, and felt unable to endure so much delay; and being
affectionate, she became desperately enamoured, and was grievously tormented
with the fire of love. And in the eager longing of her heart for Sundarasena,
even the anointing with sandal-wood ointment became a shower of hot coals on
her body, and a bed of lotus-leaves was to her a bed of hot sand, and the rays
of the moon seemed like the scorching points of flame of a forest
conflagration. She remained silent, avoiding food, adopting a vow of
loneliness; and when her confidante questioned her in her anxiety, she was at
last, with difficulty, induced to make the following avowal; “My friend, my
marriage is far off, and I cannot bear to wait for the time, separated from my
intended husband, the son of the king of Alaká. Distant is the time, and the
place, and various is the course of Fate; so who knows what will happen to any
one here in the meantime? So I had better die.” Saying this, Mandáravatí, being
sick with separation, passed immediately into a miserable state.
When her
father and mother heard that from the mouth of her confidante, and saw her in
such a condition, they deliberated with the ministers, and came to the
following conclusion, “That king Mahásena, the sovereign of Alaká, is on good
terms with us, and the princess Mandáravatí is unable to endure the delay here,
so why should we feel any delicacy about it? Happen what will, let us send her
to Alaká, for when she is near her beloved, she will be able patiently to
endure the delay.” When king Mandáradeva had gone through these deliberations,
he comforted his daughter Mandáravatí, and made her embark on a ship with
wealth and attendants, and after her mother had recited a prayer for her good
fortune, he sent her off from Hansadvípa by sea on an auspicious day, to travel
to Alaká, in order that she might be married there; and he sent with her a
minister of his own, named Vinítamati.
And after
the princess, travelling in a ship on the ocean, had left Hansadvípa some days’
sail behind her, there suddenly rose up against her a roaring cloud, as it were
a bandit, showering raindrops like arrows, that sang terribly in the whistling
wind. And the gale, like mighty fate, in a moment dragged her ship to a
distance, and smote it, and broke it in pieces. And those attendants were
drowned, and among them Vinítamati; and all her treasure was whelmed in the
ocean.
But the sea
lifted up the princess with a wave, as it were with an arm, and flung her up
alive in a forest on the shore, near the scene of the shipwreck. To think that
she should have fallen into the sea, and that a towering wave should have
landed her in a forest! Behold now, how nothing is impossible to Destiny! Then
she, in such a situation, terrified and confused, seeing that she was alone in
a solitary wood, was again plunged in a sea, but this time it was the sea of
grief. She exclaimed, “Where have I arrived? Surely it is a very different
place from that for which I set out! Where too are those attendants of mine?
Where is Vinítamati? Why has this suddenly happened to me? Where shall I go,
ill-starred as I am? Alas! I am undone! What shall I do? Cursed Fate, why did
you rescue me from the sea? Ah! father! Ah, mother! Ah, husband, son of the
king of Alaká! Look; I am perishing before I reach you; why do you not deliver
me?” While uttering these and similar exclamations, Mandáravatí wept copiously
with tears that resembled the pearls of a broken necklace.
And at that
very time a hermit, named Matanga, came there from his hermitage, which was not
far off, to bathe in the sea. That sage, who was accompanied by his daughter,
named Yamuná, who had observed a vow of virginity from her childhood, heard the
sound of Mandáravatí’s weeping. And with his daughter he approached her kindly,
and he saw her, looking like a doe separated from a herd of deer, casting her
sorrowing eyes in every direction. And the great sage said to her with an
affectionate voice, “Who are you, and how did you get into this wood, and why
do you weep?” Then Mandáravatí, seeing that he was a compassionate man, slowly
recovered herself, and told him her story, with face dejected from shame.
Then the
hermit Matanga, after meditating, said to her, “Princess, cease to despair;
recover your composure! Though you are delicate of body as a śirísha-flower,
the calamity of sorrow afflicts you; do misfortunes ever consider whether their
victim is tender or not? But you shall soon obtain the husband you desire; so
come to this hermitage of mine, which is at no great distance from this place;
and remain there with this daughter of mine as in your own house.” When the
great hermit had comforted her with these words, he bathed, and accompanied by
his daughter, led Mandáravatí to his hermitage. There she remained leading an
ascetic life, longing to meet her husband, delighting herself with waiting upon
that sage, accompanied by his daughter.
And in the
meanwhile Sundarasena, who was emaciated with long expectation, remained
killing the time in Alaká, continually counting the days, eager for his
marriage with Mandáravatí, and his friend Chaṇḍaprabha and the rest were trying
to console him. And in course of time, as the auspicious day drew nigh, his
father, the king, made preparations for his journey to Hansadvípa. And after
prayers had been offered for a prosperous journey, prince Sundarasena started
from his home on an auspicious day, shaking the earth with his armies.
And as he
was marching along with his ministers, he reached in course of time, to his
delight, that city Śaśánkapura, which adorned the shore of the sea. There king
Mahendráditya, hearing of his approach, came to meet him, bowing humbly, and
the prince entered the city with his followers, and mounted on an elephant, he
reached the palace of the king. And as he went along, the splendour of his
beauty fluttered the hearts of the ladies of the city, as the hurricane
flutters the lotus-bed. In the palace, king Mahendráditya shewed him every
attention, and promised to accompany him: and so he rested there that day. And
he spent the night in such thoughts as these, “Shall I ever get across the sea,
and win that blushing bride?”
And next
morning he left his army in that very city, and went with king Mahendráditya to
the shore of the sea. There he and his ministers, together with that king,
embarked on a large ship, that was well supplied with food and water. And the
prince made the small retinue, that he could not help taking, embark on a
second ship. Then the ship was let go, and its flag fluttered in the wind, and
those two kings, who were in it, shaped their course towards the south-western
quarter.
And after
two or three days had passed, as they were sailing on the sea, there suddenly
arose a great hurricane. And the ranges of forest on the shores of the sea
shook to and fro, as if in astonishment at the unprecedented character of the
gale. And the waters of the sea, inverted by the wind, were turned upside down,
again and again, as affections are by lapse of time. And an offering of jewels
was made to the sea accompanied by a loud cry of woe; and the pilots let loose
the sail and relaxed their efforts at the same time; and all excitedly flung
out very heavy stones on all sides, fastened by chains, and flung away their
hopes of life at the same time; and the two vessels, driven to and fro by the
waves, as elephants by elephant-drivers, wandered about in the sea, as if in
the mêlée of a battle.
Then
Sundarasena, beholding that, was moved from his seat, as if from his
self-command, and said to king Mahendráditya, “It is through my demerits in
former births that this day of doom has suddenly come upon you. So I cannot
endure to witness it; I will fling myself into the sea.” When the prince had
said this, he quickly girt his upper garment round his loins, and flung himself
then and there into the sea. And when his five friends, Chaṇḍaprabha and the
others, saw that, they too flung themselves in, and Mahendráditya did the same.
And while, having recovered their presence of mind, they were swimming across
the ocean, they all went in different directions, being separated by the force
of the waves. And immediately the wind fell, and the sea became hushed and
calm, and bore the semblance of a good man whose wrath is appeased.
And in the
meanwhile Sundarasena, with whom was Dṛiḍhabuddhi, found a ship that had been
driven from somewhere or other by the wind, and with that minister of his as
his only companion he climbed up on it, as it were on a second swing of
incertitude oscillating between rescue and destruction. Then, having lost all
courage, he drifted, not knowing his bearings, looking on the whole world as made
of water, confiding in his god: and the ship, which was wafted along by a
gentle and favourable breeze, as if by a deity, carried him to the shore in
three days. There it stuck fast, and he and his companion sprang to shore and
to a hope of life at the same moment.
And when
there, he recovered breath, and said to Dṛiḍhabuddhi; “I have escaped even from
the sea, from the infernal regions, though I went below; but since I have not
been able to do so without causing the death of my ministers Vikramaśakti, and
Vyághraparákrama, and Chaṇḍaprabha and Bhímabhuja, such fine fellows as they
were, and also of king Mahendráditya, who became without cause so good a friend
to me,—of all these,—how can I now live with honour?” When he said this, his
minister Dṛiḍhabuddhi said to him, “Prince, recover your composure; I am
persuaded that we shall have good fortune; for they may perhaps make their way
across the sea, as we have done. Who can discern the mysterious way of
Destiny?”
While Dṛiḍhabuddhi
was saying this and other things of the same kind, two hermits came there to
bathe. The good men, seeing that the prince was despondent, came up to him, and
asked him his story, and said kindly to him; “Wise sir, even the gods are not
able to alter the mighty influence of actions in a previous state of existence,
that bestow joy and sorrow. So a resolute man, who wishes to take leave of
sorrow, should practise right doing; for right doing is the true remedy for it,
not regrets, nor emaciation of the body. So abandon despondency, and preserve
your body by resolute endurance; as long as the body is preserved, what object
of human endeavour cannot be attained? Moreover, you possess auspicious marks;
you are certain to enjoy prosperity.” Saying this the hermits consoled him, and
took him to their hermitage.
And prince
Sundarasena remained waiting there for some days, accompanied by Dṛiḍhabuddhi.
And in the
meanwhile his ministers Bhímabhuja and Vikramaśakti, having swum across the
sea, reached the shore in a separate place. And hoping that perhaps the prince
might have escaped from the sea like themselves, they entered that great
forest, and searched for him bewildered with grief. And his other two
ministers, Chaṇḍaprabha and Vyághraparákrama, and king Mahendráditya, in the
same way escaped from the sea, and sorrowfully sought for Sundarasena, and when
they did not find him, were afflicted; and at last they found their ship
unharmed and went to Śaśánkapura. Then those two ministers, and the army that
had been left in that city, hearing what had happened, went weeping to their
own city Alaká. And when they arrived without the prince, lamenting their loss,
the citizens wept, and one universal wail was heard in the city. When king
Mahásena and his queen heard that news of their son, they were in such a state
that they would have died, if it were not that their allotted term of life had
not yet expired. And when the king and the queen were bent on suicide, the
ministers dissuaded them with various speeches, which gave them reasons for entertaining
hope. Then the king remained in a temple of Svayambhú outside the town, engaged
in asceticism with his attendants, enquiring for news of his son.
And in the
meanwhile king Mandáradeva, in Hansadvípa, heard the news of the shipwreck of
his daughter, and of that of his proposed son-in-law. And he also came to know
that his son-in-law’s two ministers had arrived in Alaká, and that king
Mahásena there was keeping himself alive by hope, being engaged in practising
austerities. Then that king also, who was afflicted by grief for the loss of
his daughter, and was only prevented by his ministers from committing suicide,
entrusted to them the care of his kingdom, and with the queen Kandarpasená went
to the city of Alaká to visit king Mahásena, who was his partner in misfortune.
And he made up his mind that he would do whatever that king did, as soon as he
had trustworthy intelligence with regard to the fate of his son. And so he came
to king Mahásena, who was still more grieved when he heard of the fate of Mandáravatí,
and sorrowed in sympathy with him. Then that king of Hansadvípa remained
practising austerities with the king of Alaká, restraining his senses, eating
little, sleeping on darbha-grass.
When they
had been all scattered in this way in different directions by the Disposer, as
leaves by a wind, it happened that Sundarasena set forth from the hermitage in
which he was, and reached that hermitage of Matanga, in which Mandáravatí was
staying. There he beheld a lake of clear water, the bank of which was thickly
planted with trees bent down with the weight of many ripe fruits of various
flavours. As he was weary, he bathed in that lake, and ate sweet fruits, and
then walked on with Dṛiḍhabuddhi, and reached a forest stream. And going along
its bank, he saw some hermit maidens engaged in gathering flowers near a temple
containing a Linga. And in the midst of them he beheld one hermit maiden, who
seemed to be the peerless beauty of the world, illuminating the whole wood with
her loveliness, as if with moonlight, making all the regions full of blown blue
lilies with her glance, and sowing with her foot-falls a thicket of lotuses in
the forest.
Then the
prince said to Dṛiḍhabuddhi, “Who can this be? Can she be a nymph of heaven
worthy of being gazed upon by the hundred-eyed Indra; or is she the presiding
goddess of the forest with her shoot-like fingers clinging to the flowers?
Surely the Creator framed this very wonderful form of hers after he had
perfected his skill by continual practice in creating many nymphs of heaven.
And lo! she exactly resembles in appearance my beloved Mandáravatí, whose
beauty I beheld in a picture. Why should she not be the lady herself? But how
can this be? She is in Hansadvípa far away from this heart of the forest. So I
cannot conceive who this fair one is, and whence she comes, and how she comes
to be here.” And Dṛiḍhabuddhi, when he saw that fair maid, said to the prince,
“She must be whom you suppose her to be, otherwise how could her ornaments,
though made of forest flowers, thus resemble a necklace, a zone, a string of
bells, and the other ornaments usually worn? Moreover, this beauty and delicacy
are not produced in a forest; so you may be certain that she is some heavenly
nymph, or some princess, not the daughter of a hermit. Let us rise up and stand
here a moment to find out.” When Dṛiḍhabuddhi had said this, they both of them
stood there concealed by a tree.
And in the
meanwhile those hermit maidens, having gathered their flowers, went down into
that river with that lovely girl to bathe. And while they were amusing
themselves by splashing about in it, it happened that an alligator came and
seized that lovely girl. When those maidens saw that, they were bewildered, and
they cried out in their sorrow, “Help, help, ye woodland deities! For here is
Mandáravatí, while bathing in the river, suddenly and unexpectedly seized by an
alligator, and perishing.” When Sundarasena heard that, he thought to himself,
“Can this really be that beloved of mine?” and rushing forward he quickly killed
that alligator with his dagger. And when she fell from the monster’s mouth, as
it were from the mouth of death, he carried her up on the bank, and comforted
her.
And she,
for her part, having got over her fear, and seeing that he was a charming person,
said to herself, “Who is this great-hearted one that my good fortune has
brought here to save my life? Wonderful to say, he bears a close resemblance to
that lover of mine whom I saw in a picture, the high-born son of the king of
Alaká. Can he possibly be that very man? But out on my evil thought! Heaven
forefend! May such a man never be an exile from his native land! So it is not
fitting for me now to remain in the society of a strange man. Accordingly, I
will leave this place: may prosperity be the lot of this great-souled one!”
After going through these reflections, Mandáravatí said to those companions of
hers, “First take a respectful leave of this noble gentleman, and then come
with me; we will now depart.”
When prince
Sundarasena, whose doubts were before unsatisfied, heard this, he conceived
great confidence from merely hearing his own name, and he questioned one of her
companions, saying to her, “Auspicious one, whose daughter and of what
condition is this friend of yours? Tell me, for I feel a great desire to know.”
When he questioned the hermit maiden in these words, she said to him, “This is
the princess Mandáravatí, the daughter of king Mandáradeva, the sovereign of
Hansadvípa. She was being conducted to the city of Alaká to be married to prince
Sundarasena, when her ship was wrecked in the sea, and the waves flung her up
upon the shore: and the hermit Matanga found her there and brought her to his
hermitage.”
When she
said this, Sundarasena’s friend Dṛiḍhabuddhi, dancing like one bewildered with
joy and despondency, said to the prince, “I congratulate you on having now been
successful in obtaining the princess Mandáravatí; for is not this that very
lady of whom we were thinking?” When he had said this, her companions the
hermit maidens questioned him, and he told them his story; and they gladdened
with it that friend of theirs. Then Mandáravatí exclaimed, “Ah, my husband,”
and fell weeping at the feet of that Sundarasena. He, for his part, embraced
her and wept, and while they were weeping there, even stocks and herbs wept,
melted with compassion.
Then the
hermit Matanga, having been informed of all this by those hermit maidens, came
there quickly, accompanied by Yamuná. He comforted that Sundarasena, who
prostrated himself at his feet, and took him with Mandáravatí to his own
hermitage. And that day he refreshed him by entertaining him, and made him feel
happy; and the next day the great hermit said to that prince, “My son, I must
to-day go for a certain affair to Śvetadvípa, so you must go with Mandáravatí
to Alaká; there you must marry this princess and cherish her; for I have
adopted her as my daughter, and I give her to you. And you shall rule the earth
for a long time with her; and you shall soon recover all those ministers of
yours.” When the hermit had said this to the prince and his betrothed, he took
leave of them, and went away through the air with his daughter Yamuná, who was
equal to himself in power.
Then
Sundarasena, with Mandáravatí, and accompanied by Dṛiḍhabuddhi, set out from that
hermitage. And when he reached the shore of the sea, he saw coming near him a
light ship under the command of a young merchant. And in order to accomplish
his journey more easily, he asked the young merchant who was the owner of that
ship, through Dṛiḍhabuddhi, hailing him from a distance, to give him a passage
in it. The wicked merchant, who beheld Mandáravatí, and was at once distracted
with love, consented, and brought his ship near the shore. Then Sundarasena
first placed his beloved on board the ship, and was preparing to get on board
himself from the bank where he stood, when the wicked merchant, coveting his
neighbour’s wife, made a sign to the steersman, and so set the ship in motion.
And the ship, on board of which the princess was crying piteously, rapidly
disappeared from the view of Sundarasena, who stood gazing at it.
And he fell
on the ground crying out, “Alas! I am robbed by thieves,” and wept for a long
time, and then Dṛiḍhabuddhi said to him, “Rise up! Abandon despondency! this is
not a course befitting a hero. Come along! Let us go in that direction to look
for that thief: for even in the most grievous hour of calamity the wise do not
take leave of their fortitude.” When Sundarasena had been thus exhorted by Dṛiḍhabuddhi,
he was at last induced to rise up from the shore of the sea and set out.
And he went
on his way weeping, and crying out, “Alas, queen! Alas, Mandáravatí!”
continually scorched by the fire of separation, fasting, accompanied only by
the weeping Dṛiḍhabuddhi; and almost beside himself with distraction he entered
a great wood. And when in it, he paid no attention to the wise counsels of his
friend, but ran hither and thither, thinking only of his beloved. When he saw
the creepers in full bloom, he said, “Can this be my beloved come here, adorned
with blown flowers, having escaped from that merchant-robber?” When he saw the
beautiful lotuses, he said, “Can she have dived into a tank in her fear, and is
she lifting up her face with long-lashed eyes and looking at me?” And when he
heard the cuckoos singing concealed by the leafy creepers, he said, “Is the
sweet-voiced fair one here addressing me?” Thus raving at every step, he
wandered about for a long time, scorched by the moon, as if it were the sun;
and so to him the night was the same as the day.
And at last
the prince with Dṛiḍhabuddhi emerged from that wood, though with difficulty,
and having lost his way, reached a great wilderness. It was perilous with
fierce rhinoceroses, dangerous as being inhabited by lions, and so was as
formidable as an army, and moreover it was beset by a host of bandits. When the
prince entered this wilderness, which was refugeless, and full of many
misfortunes, like misery, he was set upon with uplifted weapons, by some
Pulindas, who happened to be on the look out for human victims to offer to
Durgá, by order of Vindhyaketu the king of the Pulindas, who lived in that
region. When the prince was tormented with five fires, of misfortune, exile,
the grief of separation, that affront from a base man, fasting, and the fatigue
of the journey; alas! Fate created a sixth fire in the form of an attack of
bandits, as if in order to exhaust his self-command.
And when
many of the bandits rushed towards him to seize him, showering arrows, he, with
only one companion to help him, killed them with his dagger. When king
Vindhyaketu discovered that, he sent forward another force, and Sundarasena,
being skilled in fighting, killed a great many bandits belonging to that force
also. At last he and his companion fainted from the exhaustion of their wounds;
and then those Śavaras bound them, and took them and threw them into prison.
The prison was full of multitudes of vermin, filthy with cobwebs, and it was
evident that snakes frequented it, as they had dropped there the skins that
clung to their throats. The dust in it rose as high as the ancle, it was
honey-combed with the holes and galleries of mice, and full of many terrified
and miserable men that had been thrown into it. In that place, which seemed the
very birthplace of hells, they saw those two ministers Bhímabhuja and
Vikramaśakti, who, like themselves, had entered that wilderness after escaping
from the sea, in order to look for their master, and had been already bound and
thrown into prison. They recognised the prince and fell weeping at his feet,
and he recognised them, and embraced them, bathed in tears.
Then their
woes were increased a hundredfold by seeing one another; but the other
prisoners there said to them, in order to console them, “Enough of grief! Can
we avoid the effect of acts done in a previous state of existence? Do you not
see that the death of all of us together is imminent? For we have been
collected here by this king of the Pulindas, in order that he may offer us up
to Durgá on the coming fourteenth day of the month. So why should you grieve?
The way of Fate, that sports with living beings, is strange; as she has given
you misfortune, she may in the same way give you prosperity.” When the other
prisoners had said this to them, they remained there bound with them; it is
terrible to see how little respect calamities shew even for the great.
And when
the fourteenth day arrived, they were all taken thence by the orders of the
king to the temple of Durgá to be sacrificed. It seemed like the mouth of death,
the flame of the lamp being its lolling tongue, the range of bells being its
row of teeth, to which the heads of men clung. Then Sundarasena, when he saw
that goddess, bowed before her, and praised her with mind humbled by devotion,
and uttered this prayer, “O thou goddess that didst quell the oppression of the
Asuras with thy blood-streaming trident, which mangled haughty Daityas, thou
that givest security to thy votaries, look upon me, goddess, that am burned up
with the forest-fire of grief, with a favourable nectar-shedding eye, and
refresh me. Honour to thee!”
While the
prince was saying this, Vindhyaketu, that king of the Pulindas, came there to
worship the goddess Durgá. The moment the prince saw the king of the Bhillas,
he recognised him, and being bowed down with shame, said of his own accord to
his friends, “Ha! this is that very Vindhyaketu, the chief of the Pulindas, who
comes to my father’s court to pay him homage, and is the lord of this vast
wilderness. Whatever may happen, we must not say anything here, for it is
better for a man of honour to die, than to make known who he is under such
circumstances.”
While the
prince was saying this to his ministers, king Vindhyaketu said to his servants,
“Come now, shew me this heroic human victim, who killed so many of my warriors
when he was being captured.” As soon as his servants heard this, they brought
Sundarasena, smeared with clotted blood, and defiled with wounds, into the
presence of that king. When the king of the Bhillas saw him, he half recognised
him, and being terrified, said to him, “Tell me, who are you, and whence do you
come?” Sundarasena answered the king of the Bhillas, “What does it matter who I
am, or whence I come? Do what you are about to do.”
Then
Vindhyaketu recognised him completely by his voice, and exclaiming excitedly,
“Alas! Alas!” fell on the ground. Then he embraced the prince, and said, “Alas,
great king Mahásena, see what a fitting return I, villain that I am, have now
made for your numerous benefits, in that I have here reduced to such a state
your son, whom you value as your life, prince Sundarasena, who has come here
from somewhere or other!” This and many other such laments he uttered in such a
way that all there began to shed tears. But the delighted companions of
Sundarasena comforted the Bhilla king, saying to him, “Is not this much that
you recognised the prince before any misfortune had happened? What could you
have done after the event had taken place? So why do you despond in the midst
of this joy?”
Then the
king fell at the feet of Sundarasena, and lovingly honoured him, and
Sundarasena got him to set all the human victims free. And after he had shown
him all due respect, he took him to his village and his friends with him, and
proceeded to bandage his wounds and administer medicines to him; and he said to
him, “Tell me, prince, what brought you to this place, for I have a great
desire to know.” Then Sundarasena related to him all his adventures. And that
prince of the Śavaras, being astonished, said to him, “What a wonderful chain
of events! That you should have set out to marry Mandaravatí, and that you
should then have been wrecked in the sea, and that this should have led to your
reaching the hermitage of Matanga, and to your meeting your beloved there, and
that this merchant, in whom you confided, should have carried her off from you,
and that you should have entered the wilderness, and have been imprisoned for
sacrifice, and recognised by me and delivered from that death—how strangely
does all this hang together! Therefore honour by all means to mysteriously
working Destiny! And you must not feel anxious about your beloved, for, as
Destiny has done all this, she will also do you that other service soon.”
While the
king of the Pulindas was saying this, his commander-in-chief came quickly in a
state of high delight, and entering said to him, “King, a certain merchant
entered this wilderness with his followers, and he had with him much wealth and
a very beautiful lady, a very gem of women; and when I heard of this, I went
with an army, and seized him and his followers, with the wealth and the lady,
and I have them here outside.” When Sundarasena and Vindhyaketu heard this,
they said to themselves “Can these be that merchant and Mandáravatí?” And they
said, “Let the merchant and the lady be brought in here at once,” and thereupon
the commander-in-chief brought in that merchant and that lady. When Dṛiḍhabuddhi
saw them, he exclaimed, “Here is that very princess Mandáravatí, and here is
that villain of a merchant. Alas, princess! How came you to be reduced to this
state, like a creeper scorched by the heat, with your bud-like lip dried up,
and with your flower-ornaments stripped off?” While Dṛiḍhabuddhi was uttering
this exclamation, Sundarasena rushed forward, and eagerly threw his arms round
the neck of his beloved. Then the two lovers wept for a long time, as if to
wash off from one another, by the water of a shower of tears, the defilement of
separation.
Then
Vindhyaketu, having consoled them both, said to that merchant, “How came you to
carry off the wife of one who confided in you?” Then the merchant said, with a
voice trembling with fear, “I have fruitlessly done this to my own destruction,
but this holy saint was preserved by her own unapproachable splendour; I was no
more able to touch her, than if she had been a flame of fire; and I did intend,
villain that I was, to take her to my own country, and after her anger had been
allayed, and she had been reconciled to me, to marry her.” When the merchant
had said this, the king ordered him to be put to death on the spot; but
Sundarasena saved him from execution; however he had his abundant wealth
confiscated, a heavier loss than that of life; for those that have lost their
wealth die daily, not so those that have lost their breath.
So
Sundarasena had that merchant set at liberty, and the wretched creature went
where he would, pleased at having escaped with life; and king Vindhyaketu took
Mandáravatí, and went with her and Sundarasena to the palace of his own queen.
There he gave orders to his queen, and had Mandáravatí honoured with a bath,
with clothes and with unguents, and after Sundarasena had been in the same way
bathed and adorned, he made him sit down on a splendid throne, and honoured him
with gifts, pearls, musk, and so on. And on account of the reunion of that
couple, the king made a great feast, at which all the Śavara women danced
delighted.
Then, the
next day, Sundarasena said to the king, “My wounds are healed, and my object is
attained, so I will now go hence to my own city; and, please, send off at once
to my father a messenger with a letter, to tell the whole story, and announce
my arrival.” When the Śavara chief heard this, he sent off a messenger with a
letter, and gave him the message which the prince suggested.
And just as
the letter-carrier was reaching the city of Alaká, it happened that king
Mahásena and his queen, afflicted because they heard no tidings of Sundarasena,
were preparing to enter the fire in front of a temple of Śiva, surrounded by
all the citizens, who were lamenting their approaching loss. Then the Śavara,
who was bearing the letter, beholding king Mahásena, came running up
proclaiming who he was, stained with dust, bow in hand, with his hair tied up
in a knot behind with a creeper, black himself, and wearing a loin-cincture of
vilva-leaves. That letter-carrier of the king of the Bhillas said, “King, you
are blessed with good fortune to-day, as your son Sundarasena has come with
Mandáravatí, having escaped from the sea; for he has arrived at the court of my
master Vindhyaketu, and is on his way to this place with him, and has sent me
on before.” Having said this, and thus discharged his confidential commission,
the letter-carrier of the Bhilla king laid the letter at the monarch’s feet.
Then all the people there, being delighted, raised a shout of joy; and the
letter was read out, and the whole of the wonderful circumstances became known;
and king Mahásena recompensed the letter-carrier, and abandoned his grief, and
made great rejoicings, and entered his palace with all his retainers. And the
next day, being impatient, he set out to meet his son, whose arrival he
expected, accompanied by the king of Hansadvípa. And his force of four arms
marched along with him, innumerable, so that the earth trembled, dreading
insupportable weight.
In the
meanwhile Sundarasena set out from that village of the Bhillas for his own
home, with Mandáravatí. And he was accompanied by his friends Vikramaśakti and
Bhímabhuja, whom he found in the prison, and Dṛiḍhabuddhi too was with him. He
himself rode on a horse swift as the wind, by the side of Vindhyaketu, and
seemed by the hosts of Pulindas that followed him, to be exhibiting the earth
as belonging to that race. And as he was marching along, in a few days he
beheld on the road his father coming to meet him, with his retinue and his
connections. Then he got down from his horse, and the people beheld him with
joy, and he and his friends went up and fell at the feet of his father. His
father, when he beheld his son looking like the full moon, felt like the sea
which surges up with throbbings of joy, and overflows its bounds, and could not
contain himself for happiness. And when he saw Mandáravatí, his
daughter-in-law, bowing at his feet, he considered himself and his family
prosperous, and rejoiced. And the king welcomed Dṛiḍhabuddhi and the other two
ministers of his son, who bowed at his feet, and he received Vindhyaketu with
still warmer welcome.
Then
Sundarasena bowed before his father-in-law Mandáradeva, whom his father
introduced to him, and rejoiced exceedingly; and beholding his ministers Chaṇḍaprabha
and Vyághraparákrama, who had arrived before, clinging to his feet, he
considered that all his wishes were accomplished. And immediately king Mahendráditya,
who was delighted at hearing what had happened, came there from Śaśánkapura out
of affection. Then prince Sundarasena, mounted on a splendid horse, escorting
his beloved, as Naḍakúvara did Rambhá, went with all those to his own home, the
city of Alaká, the dwelling-place of all felicities, abounding in virtuous men.
And accompanied by his beloved he entered the palace of his father, being
sprinkled, as he passed through the city, by the wives of the citizens, who
were all crowding to the windows, with the blue lotuses of their eyes. And in
the palace he bowed at the feet of his mother, whose eyes were full of tears of
joy, and then spent that day in rejoicings, in which all his relations and
servants took part.
And the
next day, in the long desired hour fixed by the astrologers, the prince
received the hand of Mandáravatí, who was bestowed on him by her father. And
his father-in-law, king Mandáradeva, as he had no son, bestowed on him many
priceless jewels, in his joy, and the reversion of his kingdom after his own
death. And his father, king Mahásena, without exhausting the earth, made a
great feast, in a style suitable to his desires and means, in which all
prisoners were released, and a rain of gold was seen. And having beheld
Sundarasena prosperous by his union with Mandáravatí, and having taken part in
his wedding festivities, in which all the women danced to song, and having been
honoured by king Mahásena, king Mandáradeva returned to his own territory, and
the king of Śaśánkapura returned to that city, and Vindhyaketu, the lord of the
great wilderness, returned to his domain.
And after
some days had elapsed, king Mahásena, perceiving that his son Sundarasena was
virtuous and beloved by the subjects, established him in his throne, and went
himself to the forest. And prince Sundarasena, having thus obtained the
kingdom, and having conquered all his enemies by the might of his arm, ruled
with those ministers the whole earth, and found his joy in the possession of
Mandáravatí ever increasing.
When the
minister Vyághrasena had told this story on the bank of the lake to Mṛigánkadatta,
he went on to say to him, “This wonderful tale, prince, did the hermit Kanva
relate to us in the hermitage, and at the end of the tale the compassionate man
said to us, to comfort us, ‘So, my sons, those who endure with resolute hearts
terrible misfortunes hard to struggle through, attain in this way the objects
they most desire; but those others, whose energies are paralysed by loss of
courage, fail. Therefore abandon this despondency, and go on your way. Your
master also, prince Mṛigánkadatta, shall recover all his ministers, and shall
long rule the earth, after having been united with Śaśánkavatí.’ When that
great hermit had said this to us, we plucked up courage, and spent the night
there, and then set out from that hermitage, and in course of time reached this
wood, travel-worn. And while here, being tortured with excessive thirst and
hunger, we climbed up this tree sacred to Gaṇeśa, to get fruits, and we were
ourselves turned into fruits, and we have now, prince, been released from our
fruit-transformation by your austerities. Such have been the adventures of us
four, during our separation from you brought about by the curse of the Nága;
and now that our curse is expired, advance, united with us all, towards the
attainment of your object.”
When Mṛigánkadatta had heard all this from his minister Vyághrasena, he conceived hopes of obtaining Śaśánkavatí, and so passed that night there.
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