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    The Penguin Book of Classical Indian Love Stories and Lyrics

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      springs spectacular from the hill top, gleaming

      as if blended of the lustres of brilliant gems.

      Shot through by its sheen, your dark-blue body

      shines resplendent like Vishnu’s in his cowherd guise,

      lit up by irridescent peacock-plumes.

      16

      While rustic women unversed in eyebrow play

      drink you in with eyes moist with happiness

      knowing the harvest to depend on you,

      ascend the upland plains fragrant from fresh furrowing;

      then veering slightly to the west, speed on

      keeping ever to the north.

      17

      As you approach the noble mountain Citrakuta,

      he will greet you, O travel-weary Rain-Giver,

      and bear you on his head held high: you too

      with sharp showers will quench summer’s cruel fires.

      The tenderness of true feeling in the great

      bears fruit in no time, returning kindness for kindness.

      18

      With his forest fires fully quenched by your sharp

      showers,

      Amrakuta will bear you gratefully

      on his crown, travel-weary as you are;

      even the meanest remembering former favours

      will not turn his face away from a friend

      who seeks shelter; what then of one so lofty!

      19

      Its slopes all aglow with the ripened fruit

      of wild mangoes, and you on its peak set

      like a coil of dark glossy hair, the mountain

      —seeming Earth’s breast—dark-blue centre

      encircled by pale-gold expansive curves—

      will appear entrancing to celestial lovers.

      20

      Resting awhile on that mountain

      in whose bowers the brides of foresters sport,

      and lightened by your waters’ outpouring

      you’ll speedily cross the road beyond

      and see Reva’s streams spreading dishevelled

      at Vindhya’s uneven rocky foothills,

      inlaying them like ashen streaks

      decorating an elephant’s body.

      21

      Your rain disgorged, draw up that river’s water

      whose flow impeded by rose-apple brakes

      is pungent with the scent of wild elephants in rut,

      and journey on; gaining inner strength

      the wind cannot make light of you, O Rain-Cloud;

      for hollowness makes things light; fullness bestows

      weight.

      22

      Seeing the green-gold Nipa flowers

      with their stamens half-emerging

      and the Kandal is showing their early buds

      along the edge of every pool,

      savouring the rich fragrance of the earth

      in the forests burnt by fire,

      antelopes will chart your path as you pass

      shedding fresh rain drops.

      23

      Siddhas watching catakas

      skilled catching falling rain drops,

      and pointing out to egrets in flight,

      counting them on their fingers,

      will pay you their grateful respect,

      suddenly obtaining a flurry of unexpected embraces

      from their beloved wives clinging to them in alarm

      trembling at the sound of your thunder.

      24

      Even though you would wish to proceed with speed

      for the sake of my happiness, my friend,

      I foresee delay while you loiter

      on peak after peak fragrant with wild jasmine;

      though peacocks, their eyes moist with joy may greet you

      with welcoming cries, I pray you, try to hasten onward.

      25

      The Dasarnas will put on a new beauty

      at your approach:

      woodland ringed round by ketakas

      with needle-pointed buds newly-opened

      will glow a pale gold:

      birds starting to nest will throng

      the sacred peepuls in the village squares:

      rose-apple groves will darken

      with the sheen of ripening blue-black fruit

      and wild geese settle for a few days.

      26

      When you reach that royal city, Vidisa by name

      widely renowned, you shall at once obtain

      the unalloyed fulfilment of a lover’s desire,

      tasting Vetravati’s sweet waters as a lover his beloved’s

      lips,

      with sonorous thunder passing along her banks

      as she flows with knitted brows of tremulous wavelets.

      27

      There you shall alight seeking rest on Nicai hill

      thrilling with delight at your touch

      as Kadambas burst into sudden bloom;

      the hill loudly proclaims through grottoes

      exhaling fragrances of pleasure,

      passions unrestrained of the city’s youth

      dallying there in love-sports with courtesans.

      28

      Having rested, go on, sprinkling with fresh rain drops

      clusters of jasmine-buds in gardens by woodland streams,

      enjoying a fleeting together-ness

      as your gift of shade touches

      the faces of flower-gathering maidens, who

      each time they wipe the sweat off their cheeks, bruise

      the wilting lotuses hung at their ears.

      29

      As your course points due north to Alaka,

      the way to Ujjayini is a detour no doubt,

      but do not therefore turn away from a visit to her

      palace-terraces.

      Indeed you would have lived in vain if you do not dally

      there

      with the tremulous eyes of the city’s beautiful women

      that dart in alarm at the branched lightning’s flashes.

      30

      On your path, when you meet Nirvindhya

      wearing a girdle strung of chiming bells

      —a row of water-birds plashing on her undulating

      waves—

      weaving her sinuous course with charming unsteady gait

      to reveal eddies forming her navel

      —such coy gestures are women’s first statements of

      love—

      be sure to be filled with love’s fine flavour.

      31

      Crossing that river, O fortunate lover,

      yours will be the happy task to induce Sindhu

      visibly grieving at your absence,

      her waters shrunk to a thin braid and pale

      with the paleness of dry leaves

      fallen from trees rooted on her banks,

      to cast off the sorrow withering her.

      32

      Reaching Avanti whose village-elders

      are well-versed in the Udayana-tales,

      go towards that city already spoken of;

      to Ujjayini glowing in splendour

      like a brilliant piece of Paradise

      come down to earth with traces of merits

      of dwellers in Paradise returning,

      the fruit of their good deeds almost spent.

      33

      At day-break in Ujjayini, Sipra’s cool breeze

      scented with the fragrance of lotuses comes

      prolonging the piercing cries of love-maddened

      saras-cranes.

      Refreshing to the tired limbs of women

      after passion’s ecstatic play, it removes

      their languor like an artful lover

      plying his love with amorous entreaties.

      34 & 35

      Smoke drifting through lattice-screens

      from aromatic gums that perfume women’s hair

      enhances your beautiful form;

      Palace-peacocks out of fellow-feeling

      present you their gift-offering of dance;

      worn out with travel, having passed the ni
    ght

      in her flower-fragrant mansions marked with red lac

      from the feet of lovely ladies, approach

      the holy shrine of Candesvara, Preceptor of the

      Triple-World,

      watched with awe by the Lord’s attendants,

      because your hue is the blue of His throat.

      Its gardens are stirred by Gandhavati’s breezes

      scented with the pollen of blue-lotuses

      and fragrances wafted from unguents

      used by young women sporting in her waters.

      36

      If by chance you reach Mahakala at a time other than

      sunset,

      stay on till the sun disappears from sight;

      by performing the exalted office of the temple-drum

      in the evening-rituals offered to the spear-armed Lord

      you will enjoy the full fruit, O Rain-Bearer,

      of the deep-throated rumblings of your thunder.

      37

      With jewelled belts tinkling as they move with measured

      steps,

      temple-dancers whose hands tire, gracefully waving

      chowries with glittering gem-studded handles.

      will taste from the first rain-drops you shed,

      pleasure as from a lover’s nail-marks and shower on you

      sidelong glances streaming like a line of honey-bees.

      38

      Then bathed in evening’s glow red as fresh china rose

      flowers

      when the Lord of Beings commences His Cosmic Dance,

      encircling, merging into the forest of His uplifted arms,

      dispel His desire to wear the blood-moist elephant-hide,

      your devotion observed by Bhavani

      with steady eyes, her terror now calmed.

      39

      Young women going to their lovers’ dwellings at night

      set out on the royal highway mantled

      in sight-obscuring darkness you could pierce with a pin;

      light their path with streaked lightning

      glittering like gold-rays on a touchstone,

      but do not startle them with thunder and pelting rain

      for they are easily alarmed.

      40

      On the top most terrace of some turreted mansion

      where ring-doves sleep,

      pass the night with your lightning-wife

      much-fatigued by continual play. But pray

      resume your journey the moment the sun rises;

      surely, those who undertake to help a friend

      do not linger over providing that help.

      41

      Philandering husbands come home at sunrise

      called on to comfort their anguished wives

      by drying the welling tears of betrayal;

      therefore move quickly out of the sun’s path;

      he too returns at dawn to the lotus-pool

      to dry the dew-tears on her lotus-face;

      he would be not a little incensed

      that you obstruct his bright ray-fingers.

      42

      Your self intrinsically beautiful

      even in its shadow-form will enter Gambhira’s clear

      waters

      as into a tranquil pool of consciousness;

      do not therefore cavalierly dismiss

      her welcoming glances—those dazzling upward leaps

      of glittering white fishes bright as water-lilies.

      43

      Her dark-blue waters like a garment

      slipping off the sloping bank of her hips,

      still cling to the reed-branches

      as if lightly held up by one hand;

      drawing it away as you bend over her, my friend,

      will it not be hard for you to depart?

      For who can bear to leave a woman, her loins bared,

      once having tasted her body’s sweetness?

      44

      Fragrant with the scent of the earth freshened by your

      showers,

      a cool wind that ripens the fruit on wild fig-trees

      is inhaled with delight by elephants

      through their water-spout-trunks;

      it will waft you gently to the Lord’s hill

      that you seek to approach.

      45

      Skanda has made that hill his fixed abode;

      transform yourself into a flower-cloud

      and shower him with blossoms moist with Ganga’s

      celestial waters;

      for he is the blazing energy, sun-surpassing,

      that the wearer of the crescent-moon placed

      in the Divine Fire’s mouth to protect Indra’s hosts.

      46

      Then, let your thunder magnified by the echoing

      mountain

      spur the peacock the fire-born god rides, to dance,

      its eyes brightened by the radiance of Shiva’s moon;

      Bhavani out of affection for her son

      places its fallen plume

      gleaming with irridescent circlets on her ear

      in place of the lotus-petal she wears.

      47

      Having thus worshipped

      the god born in a thicket of reeds

      and travelling some distance

      as Siddha-couples bearing lutes

      leave your path free, from fear of water-drops,

      bend low to honour Rantideva’s glory sprung

      from the sacrifice of Surabhi’s daughters

      and flowing on earth changed into a river.

      48

      Stealing the colour of the god who draws the horn-bow

      as you bend down to drink its waters,

      sky-rangers looking down will indeed see with wonder

      that river from the far distance

      as a thin line, broad though she is,

      as if Earth wore a single strand of pearls

      set with a large sapphire at the centre.

      49

      Crossing that river go onwards making

      yourself the target for the eager eyes

      of Dasapura’s women accomplished

      in the graceful play of curving eye-brows,

      their eyes with upturned lashes flashing

      with the beauty of gazelles leaping up

      and far surpassing the grace of honey-bees

      on white jasmines swaying.

      50

      Ranging with your shadow through the land

      of Brahmavarta stretching below Kuru’s field,

      do not fail to visit the battleground

      that marks the great war of the barons,

      where the wielder of the Gandiva-bow

      showered hundreds of sharp arrows on princely faces

      as you shoot driving downpours on lotuses.

      51

      The Plough-Bearer, turning away from that war

      out of affection for his kinsmen, renounced

      the cherished wine reflecting Revati’s eyes

      and worshipped Sarasvati’s waters; you too,

      enjoying those waters, O gentle Sir,

      will become pure within, dark only in form.

      52

      From there you should visit Jahnu’s daughter

      near Kanakhala’s hill where she comes down

      the slopes of the Lord of Mountains, making

      a stairway for Sagara’s sons going up to Heaven.

      She grasped Shiva’s matted hair

      clinging with wave-hands to His crest-jewel, the moon,

      foam-laughter mocking the frown on Gauri’s face.

      53

      If you aim to drink her clear crystal waters slantwise,

      hanging down by your hind-quarters in the sky

      like some elephant out of Paradise,

      as your shadow glides along her stream

      she would appear beautiful at once as though

      she and Yamuna flowed together at that spot.

      54

      Reaching that river’s true birth-pace, the mountain

      white with snows, its rocks scen
    ted by musk deer lying

      there;

      and reclining on its peak to remove

      the long journey’s weariness, you will wear

      a beauty comparable to the stain on the horn

      of the triple-eyed lord’s white bull rooting in the mud.

      55

      If a forest-fire born of cedar branches

      clashing in the blowing wind

      should assail the mountain, and its fiery sparks

      scorch the bushy tails of yaks,

      pray quench it fully with a thousand sharp showers.

      The riches of the great are best employed

      to ease the miseries of the distressed.

      56

      Unable to bear the thunder hurled down,

      Sarabhas on the mountain puffed up with pride

      will suddenly spring up in fury towards you

      who are beyond reach, only to shatter their own limbs;

      scatter them with your tumultuous laughter of hail.

      Who indeed that undertakes vain-glorious acts

      would not become the butt of ridicule!

      57

      Bending low in adoration, go round

      the rock bearing the foot-print of the moon-crested Lord,

      perpetually worshipped with offerings by Siddhas;

      looking upon it, the body abandoned

      and sins shaken off, the faithful gain

      the Eternal Station of the Lord’s attendants.

      58

      The wind breathing through hollow bamboos makes

      sweet music;

      woodland nymphs sing with passion-filled voices

      of the victory over the triple-city;

      if your thunder rumbles in the glens like a drum

      would not the ensemble then be complete

      for the Dance-Drama of the Lord of Beings?

      59

      Passing over many marvels on Himalaya’s slopes,

      you should go north through the narrow Kraunca-pass

      —gateway for wild geese and path to glory

      for the Bhrigu Chief—lengthened out cross-wise,

      beautiful like Vishnu’s dark-blue foot

      stretched out to curb Bali’s pride.

      60

      Still climbing higher, be Kailasa’s guest

      —mirror for goddesses—the joints of its ridges

      cracked by ten-faced Ravana’s straining arms.

      Towering up into the sky with lofty peaks

      radiant like white water-lilies, it stands

      as if it were the wild laughter

      of the Parent of the Triple-World

      piled up through the ages.

      61

      When, glistening like smooth-ground collyrium, you lean

      dark on its slopes white as ivory freshly cut,

      that mountain, I imagine would, like the Plough-Bearer

      with a dark-blue mantle slung o’er his shoulder

      attain to a grace so arresting

      as to hold the gaze entranced.

      62

      And if Gauri should stroll on that mountain

      created for play, holding Shiva’s hand

      divested of its snake-bracelet,

     

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