Scenes from the Ramayan, EtcTrübner & Company, 1870 - 196 pages |
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Page 32
... tears of grief and spite replied : ' Ah Queen , what frenzy has assailed thy mind , And made thee thus to instant danger blind ? Too blind to mark the seas of grief and woe That o'er thy head with whelming fury flow . For after Rama ...
... tears of grief and spite replied : ' Ah Queen , what frenzy has assailed thy mind , And made thee thus to instant danger blind ? Too blind to mark the seas of grief and woe That o'er thy head with whelming fury flow . For after Rama ...
Page 34
... Literally , the chamber of wrath , a ' growlery , ' a small , dark , room , to which , it seems , the wives and ladies of the King used to betake themselves when offended . Rage in thine eye and tears upon thy cheek ; 34 MANTHARA'S GUILE .
... Literally , the chamber of wrath , a ' growlery , ' a small , dark , room , to which , it seems , the wives and ladies of the King used to betake themselves when offended . Rage in thine eye and tears upon thy cheek ; 34 MANTHARA'S GUILE .
Page 35
Vālmīki, Ralph Thomas Hotchkin Griffith. Rage in thine eye and tears upon thy cheek ; With robes disordered and dishevelled hair Fall on the cold ground and lie prostrate there . When the King comes , still sad and speechless lie , Give ...
Vālmīki, Ralph Thomas Hotchkin Griffith. Rage in thine eye and tears upon thy cheek ; With robes disordered and dishevelled hair Fall on the cold ground and lie prostrate there . When the King comes , still sad and speechless lie , Give ...
Page 48
... by my son and by myself I swear , No tears shall soften me , no gift or prayer ; This , only this shall now my soul content : I claim thine oath and Rama's banishment . ' THE STEP - MOTHER . The night " long and 48 DASARATHA'S OATH .
... by my son and by myself I swear , No tears shall soften me , no gift or prayer ; This , only this shall now my soul content : I claim thine oath and Rama's banishment . ' THE STEP - MOTHER . The night " long and 48 DASARATHA'S OATH .
Page 73
... tears to dry , And gently answered with a moistened eye : ' O virtuous daughter of a noble line , To hear my words thy tender heart incline : $ Here , duteous ever , still in peace remain : Life in the woods is naught but grief and pain ...
... tears to dry , And gently answered with a moistened eye : ' O virtuous daughter of a noble line , To hear my words thy tender heart incline : $ Here , duteous ever , still in peace remain : Life in the woods is naught but grief and pain ...
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Common terms and phrases
arms art thou Ayodhya banishment beauty BENARES Bhagiratha Bharat bless bosom Brahma breast breath bright brow child CHITRAKUTA Cloud cried dame dark darling Dasaratha dear deed DESCENT OF GANGA earth elephant eyes fair faithful fate father fear feet flame flowers gems gentle giant glorious glory Gods gold grace grief H. H. WILSON hair hand happy head heart Heaven heavenly hermit's hill Himalaya Hindu holy honour Indra's Kalidasa Kausalya King Kumbhakarna lady Lakshman lazulite look lord lotus maid mighty Monarch moon mother mountain mourn ne'er nigh noble o'er poem pride Prince rain Rama Rama's Ramayan Ravan round royal saint serpent's venom shade shalt sire Sita Siva slain sorrow soul spake stream Swarga sweet tears tender thee thine thou hast thou wilt throne thy love trees trembling Vibhishan Vishnu voice wander waters wave weeping wife wild wood word
Popular passages
Page 11 - No sooner had the Almighty ceased but — all The multitude of Angels, with a shout Loud as from numbers without number, sweet As from blest voices^ uttering jjoy— Heaven rung With jubilee, and loud hosannas filled The eternal regions.
Page 169 - Met by his faithful brothers there, He loosed his votive coil of hair ; Thence fair Ayodhya's town he gained, And o'er his father's kingdom reigned. 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 : The Golden Age seemed come again To bless the days of Rama's reign.
Page 231 - He calls me,' in her wrath she cried, ' And all my flood shall sweep And whirl him in its whelming tide To hell's profoundest deep.' He held the river on his head, And kept her wandering, where, Dense as Himalaya's woods, were spread The tangles of his hair. No way to earth she found, ashamed, Though long and sore she strove, Condemned, until her pride were tamed, Amid his locks to rove.
Page 226 - A cow 1 or deer For thee shall straightway bleed, Or let a ram or tender lamb Be slain, for thee to feed. Mine oath forbids me to betray My little twice-born guest: See, how she clings, with trembling wings, To her protector's breast.
Page 126 - Say that the fiend has borne away his wife, His own true Sita, dearer than his life ; He will regain the spouse he loves so well, Yea, if they bore her to the depths of Hell." Down to her feet her loosened tresses hung, As, like a creeper, with twined arms she clung To bough and branch, and, falling on her knees, Shrieked out for succour to the mighty trees. Then Ravan's giant hand, unused to spare, Seized her again by her long flowing hair : Vengeance on thee that cursed touch shall bring, And stain...
Page 116 - Sita heard the cry, and entreated Lakshman to fly to his brother's rescue. He was unwilling to go, but yielded to her earnestness, and she was left alone.
Page 225 - Kas'f's mighty king. The monarch smoothed her ruffled plumes And laid her on his breast, And cried, 'No fear shall vex thee here, Rest, pretty egg-born, rest! Fair Kas'i's realm is rich and wide, With golden harvests gay, But all that's mine will I resign Ere I my guest betray.
Page 232 - Where fish and dolphins through the stream Fallen and falling dashed. Then bards who chant celestial lays, And nymphs of heavenly birth, Flocked round upon that flood to gaze That streamed from sky to earth. The gods themselves from every sphere Incomparably bright. Borne in their golden cars drew near To see the wondrous sight. The cloudless sky was all aflame With the light of a hundred suns, Where'er the shining chariots came That bore these holy ones.
Page 232 - Then bards who chant celestial lays, And nymphs of heavenly birth, Flocked round upon that flood to gaze That streamed from sky to earth. The gods themselves from every sphere, Incomparably bright, Borne in their golden cars drew near To see the wondrous sight. The cloudless sky was all aflame With the light of a hundred suns, Where'er the shining chariots came That bore those holy ones. So flashed the air with crested snakes And fish of every hue, As when the lightning's glory breaks Through fields...