Scenes from the Ramayan, EtcTrübner & Company, 1868 - 196 pages |
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Page 16
... noble child , Named Bharat , beautiful , and meek , and mild : By fond affection and obedience , sent To be his mother's pride and ornament : Like gentle modesty that lends new grace To each dear winning charm of Beauty's face . Then ...
... noble child , Named Bharat , beautiful , and meek , and mild : By fond affection and obedience , sent To be his mother's pride and ornament : Like gentle modesty that lends new grace To each dear winning charm of Beauty's face . Then ...
Page 19
... noble four , Good as the God whom all the worlds adore , Lord of all virtues , by no stain defiled , The king's chief glory was his eldest child . For he was gallant , beautiful , and strong , Void of all envy and the thought of wrong ...
... noble four , Good as the God whom all the worlds adore , Lord of all virtues , by no stain defiled , The king's chief glory was his eldest child . For he was gallant , beautiful , and strong , Void of all envy and the thought of wrong ...
Page 21
... noble lords , to show , How like fond fathers , as full well ye know , The ancient monarchs of our famous line Have ruled this mighty realm which now is mine . Their glorious steps forbade my feet to stray , And I have laboured , with a ...
... noble lords , to show , How like fond fathers , as full well ye know , The ancient monarchs of our famous line Have ruled this mighty realm which now is mine . Their glorious steps forbade my feet to stray , And I have laboured , with a ...
Page 23
... him alone all peerless graces blend , The fearless foeman and the faithful friend ; Versed in the statutes , kind to all in need , Quick to encourage every noble deed ; True to his promise , resolute of soul , Curbing THE HEIR APPARENT .
... him alone all peerless graces blend , The fearless foeman and the faithful friend ; Versed in the statutes , kind to all in need , Quick to encourage every noble deed ; True to his promise , resolute of soul , Curbing THE HEIR APPARENT .
Page 33
... and spite : Far other thou , with features formed to please , A lovely lotus bending to the breeze . Thy hump , dear damsel , too , becomes thee well , E For there the arts of noble warriors dwell ; And MANTHARA'S GUILE . 333.
... and spite : Far other thou , with features formed to please , A lovely lotus bending to the breeze . Thy hump , dear damsel , too , becomes thee well , E For there the arts of noble warriors dwell ; And MANTHARA'S GUILE . 333.
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Common terms and phrases
ancient arms art thou Aswamedha Ayodhya banishment beauty Benares Bhagiratha Bharat bless bosom Brahma breast bright Brihaspati brow child Chitrakuta Cloud cried dark darling Dasaratha dear deed e'en earth elephant exile eyes fair faithful fate father fear feet flame flowers fond forest gems gentle giant glorious glory Gods gold grace grief H. H. WILSON hair hand heart heaven heavenly hermit's Himalaya Hindu holy honour Indra's Kalidasa Kausalya king Kumbhakarna lady Lakshman lips look lord lotus Mahabharata maid mighty monarch moon mother mountain mourn ne'er nigh noble nymph o'er poem prayer pride promise rain Rama's Ramayana Ravan royal saint serpent's venom shade shalt sighs sire Sita Siva sorrow soul spake stream Swarga sweet tears tender thee thine thou art thou hast thou wilt throne tree trembling truth vext Vidisa Vishnu voice wander waters weeping wife wild wood word
Popular passages
Page 11 - Almighty ceased, but all The multitude of angels, with a shout Loud as from numbers without number, sweet As from blest voices, uttering joy...
Page 192 - Hunger and thirst oppress me sore, And I am faint with toil : Thou shouldst not stay a bird of prey Who claims his rightful spoil. They say thou art a glorious king, And justice is thy care : Then justly reign in thy domain, Nor rob the birds of air.' Then cried the king : ' A cow 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 170 - There girt with emerald steps a bright lake gleams, Where the gold lotus fires the lily's white : The swans that sail upon its silver streams Shall hail thy coming with renewed delight, And love the cool waves better for the sight That bids them linger near the pleasant shore, Without a wish to seek in distant flight The mountain lake that seemed so dear before, That lovely mountain lake now scarce remembered more.
Page 124 - 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 xii - Nowhere else are poetry and morality so charmingly united, each elevating the other as in this really holy poem.
Page 153 - Sprung from the blood of countless oxen shed. The sacrifice of the horse or of the cow, the g6m4dha or aswamtdd, appears to have been common in the earliest periods of the Hindu ritual. It has been conceived, that the sacrifice was not real but typical, and that the form of sacrificing only was performed upon the victim, after which it was set at liberty. The text of this passage, however, is unfavourable to such a notion, as the metamorphosis of the blood of the kine into a river, certainly implies...
Page 115 - Seeta 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. This being the state of affairs which Ravana desired, he now left his hiding-place, and came forward...
Page 123 - Aid her, ye Spirits ! Ah, all wild with dread Each nymph and faun before the fiend had fled. Where, where is Rama ? Rama roams afar, And Ravan bears her to his magic car. With angry threats the giant tried to still Her cries for aid, but very long and shrill Rang forth her lamentation through the air, As of one raving in her great despair :
Page 195 - Their parents' joy and hope and stay ; Who welcome to their homes the guest, And banish envy from their breast ; With reverent study love to pore On precepts of our sacred lore ; Who work not, speak not, think not sin, In body pure and pure within ; Whom avarice can ne'er mislead To guilty thought or sinful deed ; Whose fancy never seeks to roam From the dear wives who cheer their home ; Whose hero souls cast fear away When battling in a rightful fray ; Who speak the truth with dying breath Undaunted...
Page 11 - Him thought, he by the brook of Cherith stood, And saw the ravens with their horny beaks Food to Elijah bringing, even and morn ; Though ravenous, taught to abstain from what they brought.