My Lord, as I was wandering one day
in the forest of Vindhya, I met with a very handsome
boy, standing by the side of a well, crying bitterly.
When I asked what was the matter, he said: “The
old man who was with me, when trying to get water
from this well, fell in, and I am unable to help him.
What will become of me?”
Hearing this, I looked down the well,
which was not very deep, and saw the old man standing
at the bottom, the water not being sufficient to cover
him. By means of a long and tough stem of a creeper,
I pulled him up safely; then using it again as a rope,
with a cup made from the hollow stem of a bamboo,
I drew water for the poor child, who was half dead
with thirst; and finding that he was suffering from
hunger also, I knocked down some nuts from the top
of a high tree with a well-aimed blow of a stone.
The old man was very grateful for
my timely assistance; and when we were all comfortably
seated in the shade, he gave me, at my request, a
long account of the circumstances which had brought
him there, saying:
“There was formerly a King of
Vidarba remarkable for wisdom and justice, learned
in the Scriptures, a protector of his subjects (by
whom he was much beloved), a terror to his enemies,
wise in political science, upright and honest in all
his actions, kind to his dependents, grateful for
even small services, and gracious to all. Having
lived the full age of man, he died, leaving a prosperous
kingdom to his son Anantavarma, a young man of great
abilities, but caring more for the mechanical arts,
music, and poetry, than for his duties as a ruler.
“One day, one of his father’s
old counsellors in private addressed him thus:
’Sire, your majesty, with the advantage of royal
birth, has almost every good quality that can be desired;
your intelligence is very great; your knowledge superior
to that of others; but all this, without instruction
in political science and attention to public affairs,
is insufficient for a king; void of such knowledge,
he is despised, not only by foreigners, but by his
own subjects, who, disregarding all laws, human and
divine, at last perish miserably, and drag down their
sovereign in their fall. A king who has not political
wisdom, however good his eyesight may be, is regarded
by the wise as a blind man, unable to see things as
they are. I entreat you, therefore, to give up
the pursuits to which you are so devoted, and to study
the art of government. Your power will then be
strengthened, and you may long reign over a happy
and prosperous people.’
“To this exhortation the young
king appeared to listen attentively; and said:
‘Such is the teaching of the wise; it ought to
be followed.’
“After dismissing the old counsellor,
the king went into the women’s apartments, and
began to talk to them of the exhortation which he had
just received. His observations were attentively
listened to by one of his constant attendants, who
determined, if possible, to turn the king’s
thoughts in another direction, and prevent him from
being influenced by the good advice which had been
given. This man had many accomplishments; he
was skilled in dancing, music, and singing; quick
at repartee; a good story-teller; full of fun and jokes;
but devoid of honour and honesty; false, slanderous,
a receiver of bribes, a bad man in every way; yet,
from his wit and humour, very acceptable to the king,
whom he now thus addressed: ’Wherever there
is a person of exalted position, there are always
clever rogues ready to prey upon him, and, while degrading
him, to accomplish their own base purposes. Some,
under the guise of religion, will tell him: “The
happiness of this world is shortlived and fleeting;
eternal happiness can only be obtained by prayer and
penance;” and so they persuade him to shave
his head, wear a dress of skins, gird himself with
a rope of sacred grass, and, renouncing all pleasures
and luxuries, to betake himself to fasting and penance,
and give away his riches to the poor, meaning, of
course, themselves; some of these religious impostors
will even persuade their dupes to renounce children,
wife nay, even life itself.
“’But suppose a man to
have too much sense to be deluded in this way, they
will try a different plan; to one they will say:
“We can make gold; only furnish us with the
means, and your riches shall be increased a thousandfold;”
to another: “We can show you how to destroy
all your enemies without a weapon;” to another:
“Follow our advice, and, though you are nobody
now, you shall soon become a great man.”
“’If their victim is a
sovereign, they will say to him: “Four
branches of study are said to be proper for kings the
vedas, the puranas, metaphysics, and political
science; but the first three are of very
little advantage; they may safely be neglected, and
he should give up his mind to the last only.
Are there not the six thousand verses composed for
the use of kings, and containing the whole science?
Learn these by heart, and you will be prepared for
all emergencies.” So then he must set to
work to learn all these crabbed rules. He must;
according to them, distrust every one, even wife or
son. He must rise early, take a very scanty meal,
and immediately proceed to business.
“’First he must go over
accounts, and balance income and expenditure; and
while his rascally ministers pretend to have everything
very exact, they have forty thousand ways of cheating
him, and take good care of themselves.
“’Then he must sit in
public, and be tired to death with receiving frivolous
complaints and petitions, and will not even have the
satisfaction of doing justice; for, whether a cause
be just or not, his ministers will take care that
the decision shall be according to their own interests.
“’Then he is allowed a
short time for bathing, dressing, and dining; if,
indeed, the poor wretch can venture to dine, with the
constant fear of poison in his mind.
“’After this he must remain
a long time in council with his ministers, perplexed
with their conflicting arguments, and unable to understand
even the half of them; while they, pretending to act
impartially, get everything settled as they had previously
agreed and by twisting and distorting the reports
of spies and emissaries, manage to serve themselves
and their friends, and to get credit for putting down
disturbances which they themselves had excited.
“’He is now allowed to
take a little amusement, but the time for this is
restricted to an hour and a half.
“’Then he must review
his army; hear the reports of the commander of his
forces; give orders for peace or war; and act upon
the accounts brought by spies and emissaries.
“’However weary he maybe
with all this, he must sit down and read diligently,
like some poor student, for several hours. Then
at last he may retire to rest; but before he has had
half enough sleep, he will be awaked in the early
morning; and the priests will come to him, and say:
“There is an unfavourable conjunction of the
planets; evil omens have appeared; there is danger
impending; the gods must be propitiated; let a great
sacrifice be made to-day. The brahmáns are
continually engaged in supplicating the gods on your
behalf; your prosperity is dependent on their prayers;
they are miserably poor, and have many children to
support; let large donations be made.” Thus
the greedy wretches, under the pretence of religion,
are continually robbing the king and enriching themselves.
“’This is the sort of
life which you will have to lead, if you give yourself
up to the guidance of those greybeards; and, after
all, though you may have studied and studied, pored
over their musty volumes, and listened to their tedious
lectures, you are not sure of doing right.
“’And who are these fellows
who set themselves up for wise men? Do they always
do right? Are they not often themselves cheated
by the unlearned? Common sense is far better
than all this learning; instinct and feeling will
guide us in the right way; even an infant without
teaching finds out how to draw nourishment from the
mother’s breast. Cast aside, then, the
rules and restrictions with which these old fools
would bind you. Follow your natural inclinations,
and enjoy life while you can. You possess youth,
beauty, and strength. You have a large army,
ten thousand elephants, and three hundred thousand
horses; your treasury is full of gold and jewels,
and would not be emptied in a thousand years.
What more would you have? Life is short, and those
who are always thinking of adding to their possessions,
go on toiling to the last, and never really enjoy
them.
“’But why should I waste
your time with needless arguments? I see you
are already convinced. Commit, then, the cares
of government to your ministers; spend your time with
your ladies, and congenial friends like me; enjoy
drinking, music, and dancing, and trouble yourself
no more with affairs of state.’
“Having thus spoken, he prostrated
himself in very humble attitude at the feet of his
master, who remained for a time silent, as if undecided.
“The women, who had been listening
with delight to all that was said, seeing his hesitation,
assembled round him, and, with sweet words and caresses,
easily persuaded him to follow his own inclination
and theirs.
“From that time the young king,
given up entirely to pleasures and amusements, left
the affairs of the kingdom to his ministers; and,
while allowing them to manage as they pleased, provided
they did not trouble him, openly treated them with
insolence and neglect, and even took pleasure in hearing
them ridiculed by the worthless parasites who surrounded
him, so that even the wisest of his ministers, while
lamenting the sad state of affairs, could only acknowledge
their inability to remedy it, and wait till some great
public calamity, or the invasion of the country by
a neighbouring sovereign, who was gradually extending
his dominions by force or cunning, should bring the
young king to his senses.
“Ere long, what they had expected
came to pass; for the King of Asmaka, who had for
some time coveted the country, but did not dare openly
to invade it while it was strong and prosperous, took
measures in secret to weaken the authority of Anantavarma,
and diminish his resources; and, lest he should perchance
see the error of his ways and abandon his vicious
courses, he secretly gave a commission to the son
of one of his ministers, a young man of great abilities
and agreeable manners, an eloquent flatterer and amusing
companion, who arrived at the court of Anantavarma,
attended by a numerous retinue, as if travelling about
for his own pleasure.
“This man soon became intimate
with the king, and took care to fall in with all his
tastes, and to justify and praise every pursuit which
he engaged in.
“Thus, if he saw the king fond
of hunting, he would say: ’What a fine
manly sport this is! How it strengthens the body,
braces the spirits, and quickens the intelligence!
While roaming over hill and dale, you become acquainted
with the country; by destroying the deer and wild
buffaloes, you benefit the husbandmen; by killing the
tigers and other wild beasts, you make travelling
safer.’ And he would go on in this way,
without any allusion to the damage and destruction
caused by the king’s hunting expeditions.
“If gambling was the favourite
amusement, or there was excessive devotion to women,
or to drinking, he would very ingeniously bring forward
everything that could be said in favour of them, passing
over their disadvantages in silence. If the king
was lavish to his dependants, he would praise his
generosity; if cruel, he would say: ’Such
severity is good; you maintain your own dignity by
it; a king ought not to be like a patient devotee,
submitting to insults, and ready to forgive.
“In this manner that wicked
wretch obtained great influence over the king, and
employed it to lead him into all sorts of excesses.
“With such an example before
them, all classes gradually became corrupted.
The magistrates neglected their duties, and thought
only how they might enrich themselves; great criminals,
who could bribe, escaped with impunity; the weak were
oppressed by the strong; violence and robbery were
rampant; disturbances broke out on all sides; and
severe and indiscriminating punishments only stirred
up indignation, without repressing crime. The
revenue diminished, while expenditure was increasing;
everywhere loud complaints were heard, and great distress
prevailed.
“As if all this were not sufficient,
the cruel King of Asmaka sent emissaries in all directions
to mix unsuspectedly with the inhabitants of Vidarba,
and do as much mischief as possible.
“Some would distribute subtle
poisons in various ways; some would stir up quarrels
between neighbouring villages, and so cause party fights;
some contrived to let loose a furious elephant into
a crowd, or get up an alarm by other means, and so
cause a sudden panic, in which the people trampled
down each other, and many lives were lost; others,
disguised as hunters, promising abundance of game,
would tempt men into some narrow valley, between high
mountains, where they were devoured by tigers, or,
unable to find their way out again, perished of hunger
and thirst.
“By these and many other devices,
they succeeded in destroying life and weakening the
country, so that less resistance might be offered to
the invader.
“Then, thinking the time to
be arrived, the King of Asmaka prepared for war.
Meanwhile, his emissary was leading on the foolish
young king to destruction; and at this very time,
as if in perfect security, he was amusing himself
with the performances of a celebrated actress and
dancer, having, at the instigation of his treacherous
friend, persuaded her, by large donations, to leave
the King of Kuntala, with whom she was a great favourite.
“Indignant at such an insult,
that king was easily persuaded to join the King of
Asmaka, who had already obtained several other allies
eager to have a share in the expected conquest and
plunder.
“Thus, when the country was
actually invaded, no effectual resistance was made;
Anantavarma was easily defeated, and fell into the
power of his cruel enemy.
“The cunning King of Asmaka,
who had gained his allies by many liberal promises,
had no intention of sharing the conquered country with
any one; he professed, however, great disinterestedness;
declared that he should be contented with a very small
part; and, having desired his allies to arrange between
themselves what each should take, contrived, by his
intrigues, to make them quarrel over the division.
The result was that they fought with, and so weakened
each other, that he was able to disregard their claims,
and to annex the whole of the conquered country to
his own dominions.
“After the defeat and death
of Anantavarma, an old and faithful minister escaped
with the queen and her two children, this boy and his
elder sister Manjuvadini, together with a few faithful
followers, including myself; and though the old minister
was taken ill and died on the road, the rest arrived
safely at Mahishmati, where the queen was well received
by the king Amittravarma, a half-brother of her husband,
and where she devoted herself to the education of her
son, hoping that he might one day recover his father’s
kingdom.
“After a time, however, that
king sought to marry his brother’s widow; and,
having been rejected by her, determined to take revenge
by killing her son.
“The queen, having discovered
his intentions, sent for me, and said: ’My
life is wrapped up in this boy; I can endure any thing,
so long as he is safe; take him and make your escape
at once; I know not where to send you, but if you
can find a safe refuge, let me know, and I will come
to you, if possible.’
“In obedience to her commands,
I took the boy, succeeded in escaping with him, and
reached a shepherd’s hut on the borders of this
forest. There we stayed a few days till I saw
a man whom I suspected to be searching for us.
Fearing discovery, I left the cottage, and entered
the forest. Here, while trying to get water to
quench the poor child’s burning thirst, I slipped
into the well, where I should have perished but for
your timely assistance; and now, having done us this
kindness, will you add to it by protecting the boy,
and helping us to reach a place of safety?”
“Who was his mother,”
I asked. “Of what family was she?”
“She is the daughter of the
King of Oude,” he answered, “and her mother
was Sagaradatta, daughter of Vaisravana, a merchant
of Pataliputra.”
“If so,” I replied, “she
and my father are cousins by the mother’s side;
this boy is therefore my relation, and has a right
to my protection.”
The old man was much pleased at hearing
this, and I promised not only to protect the boy,
but to contrive some means for reinstating him in
his proper position, and overcoming that wicked King
of Asmaka with cunning equal to his own.
For the present, however, the most
needful thing was to procure food. While I was
considering how to obtain this, two deer passed, pursued
by a forester, who shot three arrows and missed them,
and, in despair, let fall his bow and two remaining
arrows. Hastily snatching up these, I discharged
the arrows in rapid succession, and killed both the
deer; one of them I gave to the hunter, the other
I prepared, and roasted a part of it for ourselves.
The forester was astonished by my
skill, and delighted at the acquisition of so much
food; and it occurred to me that I might get some
information from him. I asked him therefore:
“Do you know anything of what is going on at
Mahishmati?”
“I was there early this morning,”
he answered, “for I had a tiger skin and other
skins to sell, and great festivities were in preparation;
the Prince Prachandavarma, the king’s younger
brother, is about to marry the Princess Manjuvadini,
and the rejoicings are on this account.”
After the forester was gone, I said
to the old man (whose name was Nalijangha): “That
wretch Amittravarma is trying to make it up with his
sister-in-law by promoting a good marriage for her
daughter; no doubt he thinks to persuade her to recall
her son, that he may have him in his power. Do
you therefore leave the boy with me, and go back at
once to his mother. Tell her how you have met
with me, and that the child is quite safe under my
protection; but give out in public that he has been
carried off and devoured by a tiger. I shall come
to the city disguised as a beggar; do you wait for
me near the cemetery.”
All this he promised to do, and set
off immediately, having first received further directions
for the guidance of the queen.
After some days, it was generally
understood at Mahishmati that the boy who had escaped
into the forest had been killed by a tiger; and the
king, secretly rejoicing, went to condole with the
mother. She appeared as if greatly distressed
by the news, and said to him: “I look upon
the death of my son as a judgment upon me for not complying
with your wishes, and am therefore now ready to become
your wife.”
The old wretch was delighted at her
compliance, and preparations were made for the marriage.
On the appointed day, in the presence
of a numerous assembly, she took a small leafy branch,
and dipping it in what appeared to be water, but which
really contained a deadly poison, struck him gently
with it on the face, saying: “If you are
acting right, this will not injure you; if you are
sinning in taking me, your brother’s wife, and
I am faithful to my husband, may this be like the
blow of a sword to you.”
Such was the strength of the poison
that he fell dead almost instantaneously. Then
dipping the same branch into other water containing
an antidote, she struck her daughter in a similar manner;
and, as no injury followed, the spectators were fully
convinced that the death of Amittravarma was a punishment
from heaven.
Soon after this (by my directions,
and in order to throw him off his guard), she said
to Prachandavarma: “The throne is now vacant;
you should occupy it at once, and make my daughter
your queen.”
He listened to the suggestion; and,
as the young boy, the nephew of the late king, was
supposed to be dead, no opposition was made by the
people.
Then the Queen Vasundhara (also by
my directions) sent for some of the late king’s
ministers, and of the elders of the city, whom she
knew to be ill-affected towards Prachandavarma, and
said to them: “Last night the goddess Durga
appeared to me in a vision, and said: ’Your
child is safe; I myself, in the form of a tigress,
carried him away, to save him from his enemies.
In four days from this time Prachandavarma will suddenly
die; on the fifth day let all the authorities assemble
round my temple on the bank of the river, and close
the doors, after having ascertained that no one is
concealed inside. After waiting one hour, the
door will open and a young brahmán will come forth,
holding your son by the hand. That boy will become
King of Vidarba, and that brahmán is to marry
your daughter.’”
After the divine manifestation in
favour of the queen when Amittravarma was struck dead,
this account of the vision was readily believed by
her hearers, who promised to keep the secret and to
be guided by her directions.
When the fourth day arrived I entered
the city, disguised as a beggar, and brought the boy
to his delighted mother, who introduced me to her
daughter, whom I greatly admired, and she, though agitated,
was evidently pleased with me, even under such a disguise.
I did not venture to stay long, and
after receiving an alms and assuring the queen that
the imagined dream would prove true, I went away,
taking the boy with me, and at parting, in order to
deceive her attendants, she said aloud: “Your
application shall not have been in vain; I will take
care to protect your boy.”
Nalijangha, the old servant whom I
had rescued in the forest, met me on my arrival, and
was waiting at the place which I had appointed.
I went to him there and asked him for information
as to the movements and occupations of the new king.
“That doomed man,” he answered, “thinking
all obstacles removed, and rejoicing at his accession
to power, is now amusing himself in the palace gardens,
with a number of actors, tumblers, and dancing girls.”
“I could not have a better opportunity,”
I replied; “do you therefore stay here with
the boy, and wait for me in this old ruin. I shall
not be long gone.”
I then dressed myself in the clothes
of a tumbler, which I had brought with me for the
purpose, went boldly into the garden, presented myself
to the king, and asked for permission to exhibit my
skill before him. This was readily granted; an
opportunity was soon given me of showing what I could
do, and I obtained much applause from the spectators.
After a time I begged some of those present to lend
me their knives, and I caused much astonishment by
the way in which I appeared to balance myself on the
points. Then, still, holding one of the knives,
I imitated the pouncing of a hawk and an eagle, and
having by degrees got near the king, I threw the knife
with such good aim, that it pierced him to the heart,
and I shouted out at the same time, “Long live
Vasantabhanu!” that it might be supposed I had
been sent by him. After this, dashing by the
guards, who tried to stop me, I suddenly leaped over
the wall, and before any of my pursuers could cross
it, I had run a long way on the other side. Doubling
back, I got behind a great heap of bricks, and from
thence, concealed by the trees, succeeded in reaching
the ruins unobserved. Here I changed my clothes
and went back to the city, as if nothing had happened.
In order to have everything ready
for my intended concealment, I had gone secretly the
day before to the Temple of Durga, and had there made
an underground chamber, communicating with the interior
through an opening in the wall, which was carefully
closed with a large stone, and now, taking the boy
with me, I entered the hiding place, having been furnished
with suitable dresses and ornaments, sent by the queen,
through Nalijangha.
The assassination of Prachandavarma
was universally attributed to his enemy, the King
of Asmaka, and the first part of the prophecy of Durga,
as told by the queen, being thus accomplished, there
was no doubt, on the part of those who were in the
secret, as to the fulfilment of the remainder.
In the morning a great crowd was assembled
round the temple; for although the secret of the queen’s
vision had been kept, it was generally understood
that something wonderful was to take place there.
Presently the queen and her attendants
arrived, entered the building, and paid their devotions
to the goddess, after which the whole temple was carefully
searched, to make sure that no one was concealed there,
and all having withdrawn, the doors were closed, and
the people stood without in silence, anxiously awaiting
the pleasure of the goddess.
A band then began to play and the
kettledrums were loudly struck, so that the sound
reached me in the hiding-place. At this, which
was the preconcerted signal, I made a great effort,
moved the large stone, and came forth with the boy
into the temple. Having changed our dresses, I
placed the old ones in the hole, carefully refitted
the stone, and throwing the temple door wide open,
stood in front of the astonished multitude, holding
the young prince by the hand.
While they were gazing in bewilderment,
I thus addressed them: “The great goddess
Durga, who lately showed herself in a vision to the
queen, has been pleased to restore to his longing mother
this child, whom she, in the form of a tigress, had
carried away, and she commands you, by my mouth, to
accept him as your sovereign.”
Then turning to the queen, I said: “Receive
your child from the hands of Durga, who will henceforth
protect him as her own son; and by her command accept
me as the husband of your daughter.”
To the ministers and elders I said: “The
goddess has brought me here, not merely as a messenger
of her will, but as a defender of your country from
that wicked King of Asmaka, whose cruel and unscrupulous
intrigues are well known; accept me, therefore, as
your deliverer, and as the guardian of the young king
appointed by Durga.”
Upon this all broke out into loud
acclamations, saying: “Great is the
power of the glorious Durga! happy the country of which
you are the protector!” and I was conducted
in triumph to the palace, together with the queen,
who could now openly show her joy at the recovery of
her son.
So well had I managed, that no suspicion
arose of the deception which had been practised, and
all the people venerated the young king as being especially
under the protection of the goddess, and me as the
agent chosen by her for his restoration.
Thus my authority was well established.
I caused, in due time, the young prince to be formally
proclaimed king, and had him carefully educated; and
I myself received the hand of the lovely Manjuvadini,
as the reward of my services and in obedience to the
commands of Durga.
After some time, however, I began
to reflect: “Though my position now seems
quite secure, yet, after all, I am a foreigner here,
and when the first burst of admiration is over, people
may perhaps begin to ask, ’Who is this stranger
who has come among us in such a mysterious manner?
and what is he that he should thus lord it over us?’
And it occurred to me that if I could make friends
with an old and much-respected minister, named Aryaketu,
so as to trust him entirely, he might be of great
assistance to me.”
Before, however, making any overtures
to him, I desired Nalijangha to try him secretly and
ascertain his feelings towards me.
My agent, therefore, had many interviews
with him, and tried to persuade him that it was not
for the good of the country that a stranger and foreigner
should occupy such an important position, which ought
rather to be held by a native, and that it would be
very desirable to get rid of me.
To all this Aryaketu answered:
“Do not speak against so good a man, and one
of such wonderful ability, endowed with such great
courage, generosity, and kindness. So many good
qualities are rarely found united in one person.
I esteem the country very fortunate in having such
a ruler, and am convinced, that through him the King
of Asmaka will one day be driven out, and our prince
established on his father’s throne. Nothing
shall induce me to plot against such a man.”
After hearing this from Nalijangha,
I tried the old minister in various ways, and seeing
no reason to doubt his fidelity and attachment, I
gave him my full confidence, and found him a most useful
friend.
With his advice and assistance, I
was able to appoint efficient officers in every department.
I encouraged religion and punished heresy; I kept
each of the four castes in their proper sphere, and
without oppressing the people, I collected a large
revenue, for there is nothing worse than weakness
in a ruler, and without money he cannot be strong.