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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52309 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52309)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Twenty-Two Goblins, by Arthur W. Ryder
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Twenty-Two Goblins
- Translated from the Sanskrit
-
-Author: Arthur W. Ryder
-
-Illustrator: Perham W. Nahl
-
-Translator: Arthur W. Ryder
-
-Release Date: June 11, 2016 [EBook #52309]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charlene Taylor, Christopher Wright and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS
-
-
-
-
-_All rights reserved_
-
-[Illustration: Love-cluster ... stood at her lattice window.]
-
-
-
-
-_TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS_
-
- TRANSLATED FROM THE SANSKRIT
-
- BY
-
- ARTHUR W. RYDER
-
- [Illustration]
-
- WITH TWENTY
- ILLUSTRATIONS IN
- COLOUR BY
-
- PERHAM W. NAHL
-
-
- LONDON & TORONTO
- J. M. DENT & SONS LTD.
- NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO.
- MCMXVII
-
-
-
-
- _Printed in Great Britain
- by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- _Page_
-
- _Introduction_ 1
-
- _Goblin-
- story_
-
- 1. _The Prince's Elopement. Whose fault was the
- resulting death of his parents-in-law?_ 5
-
- 2. _The Three Lovers who brought the Dead Girl to
- Life. Whose wife should she be?_ 19
-
- 3. _The Parrot and the Thrush. Which are worse,
- men or women?_ 25
-
- 4. _King Shudraka and Hero's Family. Which of
- the five deserves the most honour?_ 37
-
- 5. _The Brave Man, the Wise Man, and the Clever
- Man. To which should the girl be given?_ 51
-
- 6. _The Girl who transposed the Heads of her Husband
- and Brother. Which combination of
- head and body is her husband?_ 57
-
- 7. _The Mutual Services of King Fierce-lion and
- Prince Good. Which is the more deserving?_ 63
-
- 8. _The Specialist in Food, the Specialist in Women, and
- the Specialist in Cotton. Which is the cleverest?_ 75
-
- 9. _The Four Scientific Suitors. To which should
- the girl be given?_ 81
-
- 10. _The Three Delicate Wives of King Virtue-banner.
- Which is the most delicate?_ 87
-
- 11. _The King who won a Fairy as his Wife. Why
- did his counsellor's heart break?_ 91
-
- 12. _The Brahman who died because Poison from a
- Snake in the Claws of a Hawk fell into a Dish
- of Food given him by a Charitable Woman.
- Who is to blame for his death?_ 109
-
- 13. _The Girl who showed Great Devotion to the Thief.
- Did he weep or laugh?_ 117
-
- 14. _The Man who changed into a Woman at Will.
- Was his wife his or the other man's?_ 125
-
- 15. _The Fairy Prince Cloud-chariot and the Serpent
- Shell-crest. Which is the more self-sacrificing?_ 135
-
- 16. _The King who died for Love of his General's
- Wife; the General follows him in Death.
- Which is the more worthy?_ 157
-
- 17. _The Youth who went through the Proper Ceremonies.
- Why did he fail to win the magic spell?_ 163
-
- 18. _The Boy whom his Parents, the King, and the
- Giant conspired to Kill. Why did he laugh
- at the moment of death?_ 173
-
- 19. _The Man, his Wife, and her Lover, who all
- died for Love. Which was the most foolish?_ 187
-
- 20. _The Four Brothers who brought a Dead Lion to
- Life. Which is to blame when he kills them
- all?_ 197
-
- 21. _The Old Hermit who exchanged his Body for
- that of the Dead Boy. Why did he weep and
- dance?_ 203
-
- 22. _The Father and Son who married Daughter and
- Mother. What relation were their children?_ 209
-
- _Conclusion_ 217
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _Love-cluster ... stood at her lattice window_ _Frontispiece_
-
- _facing page_
-
- _They took her body to the cemetery and burned it_ 17
-
- _The thrush suddenly became a goddess_ 32
-
- _Trusty worshipped the goddess and bravely saluted her_ 42
-
- _The giant came out in anger and the brave man fought
- with him_ 55
-
- _"Do nothing rash, my daughter, leave the rope alone"_ 61
-
- _Good sank into the ocean, and when he looked about he
- saw a wonderful city_ 67
-
- _The brothers went to the ocean, and there they found
- a turtle_ 78
-
- _"I understand the cries of all beasts and birds"_ 83
-
- _She gradually recovered consciousness_ 88
-
- _When he saw that she was saved, the king cried,
- "Come, come to me!"_ 97
-
- _The summer came on him like a lion_ 112
-
- _With a turn of the wrist he sent the dagger flying from
- the chief's hand_ 121
-
- _An elephant came by, crushing the people in his path_ 126
-
- _He climbed the rock of sacrifice, eager to give his life for
- another_ 148
-
- _"Shall I go into the fire or go home?"_ 163
-
- _The giant laughed aloud, spit fire in his wrath, and
- showed his dreadful fangs_ 174
-
- _A merchant named Fortune richer than the god of
- wealth_ 188
-
- _The lion arose and killed his four creators_ 200
-
- _He comforted her and soothed her with tender words_ 214
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS]
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-On the bank of the Godavari River is a kingdom called the Abiding
-Kingdom. There lived the son of King Victory, the famous King
-Triple-victory, mighty as the king of the gods. As this king sat in
-judgment, a monk called Patience brought him every day one piece of
-fruit as an expression of homage. And the king took it and gave it each
-day to the treasurer who stood near. Thus twelve years passed.
-
-Now one day the monk came to court, gave the king a piece of fruit as
-usual, and went away. But on this day the king gave the fruit to a pet
-baby monkey that had escaped from his keepers, and happened to wander
-in. And as the monkey ate the fruit, he split it open, and a priceless,
-magnificent gem came out.
-
-When the king saw this, he took it and asked the treasurer: "Where
-have you been keeping the fruits which the monk brought? I gave them to
-you." When the treasurer heard this, he was frightened and said: "Your
-Majesty, I have thrown them all through the window. If your Majesty
-desires, I will look for them now." And when the king had dismissed
-him, he went, but returned in a moment, and said again: "Your Majesty,
-they were all smashed in the treasury, and in them I see heaps of
-dazzling gems."
-
-When he heard this, the king was delighted, and gave the jewels to the
-treasurer. And when the monk came the next day, he asked him: "Monk,
-why do you keep honouring me in such an expensive way? Unless I know
-the reason, I will not take your fruit."
-
-Then the monk took the king aside and said: "O hero, there is a
-business in which I need help. So I ask for your help in it, because
-you are a brave man." And the king promised his assistance.
-
-Then the monk was pleased, and said again: "O King, on the last night
-of the waning moon, you must go to the great cemetery at nightfall, and
-come to me under the fig-tree." Then the king said "Certainly," and
-Patience, the monk, went home well pleased.
-
-So when the night came, the mighty king remembered his promise to the
-monk, and at dusk he wrapped his head in a black veil, took his sword
-in his hand, and went to the great cemetery without being seen. When
-he got there, he looked about, and saw the monk standing under the
-fig-tree and making a magic circle. So he went up and said: "Monk, here
-I am. Tell me what I am to do for you."
-
-And when the monk saw the king, he was delighted and said: "O King, if
-you wish to do me a favour, go south from here some distance all alone,
-and you will see a sissoo tree and a dead body hanging from it. Be so
-kind as to bring that here."
-
-When the brave king heard this, he agreed, and, true to his promise,
-turned south and started. And as he walked with difficulty along the
-cemetery road, he came upon the sissoo tree at some distance, and saw
-a body hanging on it. So he climbed the tree, cut the rope, and let it
-fall to the ground. And as it fell, it unexpectedly cried aloud, as
-if alive. Then the king climbed down, and thinking it was alive, he
-mercifully rubbed its limbs. Then the body gave a loud laugh.
-
-So the king knew that a goblin lived in it, and said without fear:
-"What are you laughing about? Come, let us be off." But then he did
-not see the goblin on the ground any longer. And when he looked up,
-there he was, hanging in the tree as before. So the king climbed the
-tree again, and carefully carried the body down. A brave man's heart is
-harder than a diamond, and nothing makes it tremble.
-
-Then he put the body with the goblin in it on his shoulder, and started
-off in silence. And as he walked along, the goblin in the body said: "O
-King, to amuse the journey, I will tell you a story. Listen."
-
-
-
-
-FIRST GOBLIN
-
-_The Prince's Elopement. Whose fault was the resulting death of his
-parents-in-law?_
-
-
-There is a city called Benares where Shiva lives. It is loved by pious
-people like the soil of Mount Kailasa. The river of heaven shines there
-like a pearl necklace. And in the city lived a king called Valour who
-burned up all his enemies by his valour, as a fire burns a forest. He
-had a son named Thunderbolt who broke the pride of the love-god by his
-beauty, and the pride of men by his bravery. This prince had a clever
-friend, the son of a counsellor.
-
-One day the prince was enjoying himself with his friend hunting, and
-went a long distance. And so he came to a great forest. There he saw a
-beautiful lake, and being tired, he drank from it with his friend the
-counsellor's son, washed his hands and feet, and sat down under a tree
-on the bank.
-
-And then he saw a beautiful maiden who had come there with her servants
-to bathe. She seemed to fill the lake with the stream of her beauty,
-and seemed to make lilies grow there with her eyes, and seemed to shame
-the lotuses with a face more lovely than the moon. She captured the
-prince's heart the moment that he saw her. And the prince took her eyes
-captive.
-
-The girl had a strange feeling when she saw him, but was too modest to
-say a word. So she gave a hint of the feeling in her heart. She put a
-lotus on her ear, laid a lily on her head after she had made the edge
-look like a row of teeth, and placed her hand on her heart. But the
-prince did not understand her signs, only the clever counsellor's son
-understood them all.
-
-A moment later the girl went away, led by her servants. She went home
-and sat on the sofa and stayed there. But her thoughts were with the
-prince.
-
-The prince went slowly back to his city, and was terribly lonely
-without her, and grew thinner every day. Then his friend the son of
-the counsellor took him aside and told him that she was not hard to
-find. But he had lost all courage and said: "My friend, I don't know
-her name, nor her home, nor her family. How can I find her? Why do you
-vainly try to comfort me?"
-
-Then the counsellor's son said: "Did you not see all that she hinted
-with her signs? When she put the lotus on her ear, she meant that she
-lived in the kingdom of a king named Ear-lotus. And when she made the
-row of teeth, she meant that she was the daughter of a man named Bite
-there. And when she laid the lily on her head, she meant that her name
-was Lily. And when she placed her hand on her heart, she meant that she
-loved you. And there is a king named Ear-lotus in the Kalinga country.
-There is a very rich man there whom the king likes. His real name is
-Battler, but they call him Bite. He has a pearl of a girl whom he
-loves more than his life, and her name is Lily. This is true, because
-people told me. So I understood her signs about her country and the
-other things." When the counsellor's son had said this, the prince was
-delighted to find him so clever, and pleased because he knew what to
-do.
-
-Then he formed a plan with the counsellor's son, and started for the
-lake again, pretending that he was going to hunt, but really to find
-the girl that he loved. On the way he rode like the wind away from his
-soldiers, and started for the Kalinga country with the counsellor's son.
-
-When they reached the city of King Ear-lotus, they looked about and
-found the house of the man called Bite, and they went to a house near
-by to live with an old woman. And the counsellor's son said to the old
-woman: "Old woman, do you know anybody named Bite in this city?"
-
-Then the old woman answered him respectfully: "My son, I know him well.
-I was his nurse. And I am a servant of his daughter Lily. But I do not
-go there now because my dress is stolen. My naughty son is a gambler
-and steals my clothes."
-
-Then the counsellor's son was pleased and satisfied her with his own
-cloak and other presents. And he said: "Mother, you must do very
-secretly what we tell you. Go to Bite's daughter Lily, and tell her
-that the prince whom she saw on the bank of the lake is here, and sent
-you with a love-message to her."
-
-The old woman was pleased with the gifts and went to Lily at once.
-And when she got a chance, she said: "My child, the prince and the
-counsellor's son have come to take you. Tell me what to do now." But
-the girl scolded her and struck her cheeks with both hands smeared with
-camphor.
-
-The old woman was hurt by this treatment, and came home weeping, and
-said to the two men: "My sons, see how she left the marks of her
-fingers on my face."
-
-And the prince was hopeless and sad, but the very clever counsellor's
-son took him aside and said: "My friend, do not be sad. She was only
-keeping the secret when she scolded the old woman, and put ten fingers
-white with camphor on her face. She meant that you must wait before
-seeing her, for the next ten nights are bright with moonlight."
-
-So the counsellor's son comforted the prince, took a little gold
-ornament and sold it in the market, and bought a great dinner for the
-old woman. So they two took dinner with the old woman. They did this
-for ten days, and then the counsellor's son sent her to Lily again, to
-find out something more.
-
-And the old woman was eager for dainty food and drink. So to please him
-she went to Lily's house, and then came back and said: "My children,
-I went there and stayed with her for some time without speaking. But
-she spoke herself of my naughtiness in mentioning you, and struck me
-again on the chest with three fingers stained red. So I came back in
-disgrace."
-
-Then the counsellor's son whispered to the prince: "Don't be alarmed,
-my friend. When she left the marks of three red fingers on the old
-woman's heart, she meant to say very cleverly that there were three
-dangerous days coming." So the counsellor's son comforted the prince.
-
-And when three days were gone, he sent the old woman to Lily again. And
-this time she went and was very respectfully entertained, and treated
-to wine and other things the whole day. But when she was ready to go
-back in the evening, a terrible shouting was heard outside. They heard
-people running and crying: "Oh, oh! A mad elephant has escaped from
-his stable and is running around and stamping on people."
-
-Then Lily said to the old woman: "Mother, you must not go through the
-street now where the elephant is. I will put you in a swing and let you
-down with ropes through this great window into the garden. Then you can
-climb into a tree and jump on the wall, and go home by way of another
-tree." So she had her servants let the old woman down from the window
-into the garden by a rope-swing. And the old woman went home and told
-the prince and the counsellor's son all about it.
-
-Then the counsellor's son said to the prince: "My friend, your wishes
-are fulfilled. She has been clever enough to show you the road. So
-you must follow that same road this very evening to the room of your
-darling."
-
-So the prince went to the garden with the counsellor's son by the road
-that the old woman had shown them. And there he saw the rope-swing
-hanging down, and servants above keeping an eye on the road. And when
-he got into the swing, the servants at the window pulled at the rope
-and he came to his darling. And when he had gone in, the counsellor's
-son went back to the old woman's house.
-
-But the prince saw Lily, and her face was beautiful like the full moon,
-and the moonlight of her beauty shone forth, like the night when the
-moon shines in secret because of the dark. And when she saw him, she
-threw her arms around his neck and kissed him. So he married her and
-stayed hidden with her for some days.
-
-One day he said to his wife: "My dear, my friend the counsellor's son
-came with me, and he is staying all alone at the old woman's house. I
-must go and see him, then I will come back."
-
-But Lily was shrewd and said: "My dear, I must ask you something. Did
-you understand the signs I made, or was it the counsellor's son?" And
-the prince said to her: "My dear, I did not understand them all, but
-my friend has wonderful wisdom. He understood everything and told me."
-Then the sweet girl thought, and said: "My dear, you did wrong not to
-tell me before. Your friend is a real brother to me. I ought to have
-sent him some nuts and other nice things at the very first."
-
-Then she let him go, and he went to his friend by night by the same
-road, and told all that his wife had said. But the counsellor's son
-said: "That is foolish," and did not think much of it. So they spent
-the night talking.
-
-Then when the time for the twilight sacrifice came, a friend of Lily's
-came there with cooked rice and nuts in her hand. She came and asked
-the counsellor's son about his health and gave him the present. And she
-cleverly tried to keep the prince from eating. "Your wife is expecting
-you to dinner," she said, and a moment later she went away.
-
-Then the counsellor's son said to the prince: "Look, your Majesty. I
-will show you something curious." So he took a little of the cooked
-rice and gave it to a dog that was there. And the moment he ate it, the
-dog died. And the prince asked the counsellor's son what this strange
-thing could mean.
-
-And he replied: "Your Majesty, she knew that I was clever because I
-understood her signs, and she wanted to kill me out of love for you.
-For she thought the prince would not be all her own while I was alive,
-but would leave her for my sake and go back to his own city. So she
-sent me poisoned food to eat. But you must not be angry with her. I
-will think up some scheme."
-
-Then the prince praised the counsellor's son, and said: "You are
-truly the body of wisdom." And then suddenly a great wailing of
-grief-stricken people was heard: "Alas! Alas! The king's little son is
-dead."
-
-When he heard this, the counsellor's son was delighted, and said: "Your
-Majesty, go to-night to Lily's house, and make her drink wine until she
-loses her senses and seems to be dead. Then as she lies there, make a
-mark on her hip with a red-hot fork, steal her jewels, and come back
-the old way through the window. After that I will do the right thing."
-
-Then he made a three-pronged fork and gave it to the prince. And the
-prince took the crooked, cruel thing, hard as the weapon of Death, and
-went by night as before to Lily's house. "A king," he thought, "ought
-not to disregard the words of a high-minded counsellor." So when he had
-stupefied her with wine, he branded her hip with the fork, stole her
-jewels, returned to his friend, and told him everything, showing him
-the jewels.
-
-Then the counsellor's son felt sure that his scheme was successful. He
-went to the cemetery in the morning, and disguised himself as a hermit,
-and the prince as his pupil. And he said: "Take this pearl necklace
-from among the jewels. Go and sell it in the market-place. And if the
-policemen arrest you, say this: 'It was given to me to sell by my
-teacher.'"
-
-So the prince went to the market-place and stood there offering the
-pearl necklace for sale, and he was arrested while doing it by the
-policemen. And as they were eager to find out about the theft of the
-jewels from Bite's daughter, they took the prince at once to the chief
-of police. And when he saw that the culprit was dressed like a hermit,
-he asked him very gently: "Holy sir, where did you get this pearl
-necklace? It belongs to Bite's daughter and was stolen." Then the
-prince said to them: "Gentlemen, my teacher gave it to me to sell. You
-had better go and ask him."
-
-Then the chief of police went and asked him: "Holy sir, how did this
-pearl necklace come into your pupil's hand?"
-
-And the shrewd counsellor's son whispered to him: "Sir, as I am a
-hermit, I wander about all the time in this region. And as I happened
-to be here in this cemetery, I saw a whole company of witches who came
-here at night. And one of the witches split open the heart of a king's
-son, and offered it to her master. She was mad with wine, and screwed
-up her face most horribly. But when she impudently tried to snatch my
-rosary as I prayed, I became angry, and branded her on the hip with a
-three-pronged fork which I had made red-hot with a magic spell. And I
-took this pearl necklace from her neck. Then, as it was not a thing for
-a hermit, I sent it to be sold."
-
-When he heard this, the chief of police went and told the whole story
-to the king. And when the king heard and saw the evidence, he sent the
-old woman, who was reliable, to identify the pearl necklace. And he
-heard from her that Lily was branded on the hip.
-
-Then he was convinced that she was really a witch and had devoured his
-son. So he went himself to the counsellor's son, who was disguised as
-a hermit, and asked how Lily should be punished. And by his advice,
-she was banished from the city, though her parents wept. So she was
-banished naked to the forest and knew that the counsellor's son had
-done it all, but she did not die.
-
-[Illustration: They took her body to the cemetery and burned it.]
-
-And at nightfall the prince and the counsellor's son put off their
-hermit disguise, mounted on horseback, and found her weeping. They put
-her on a horse and took her to their own country. And when they got
-there, the prince lived most happily with her.
-
-But Bite thought that his daughter was eaten by wild beasts in the
-wood, and he died of grief. And his wife died with him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When he had told this story, the goblin asked the king: "O King,
-who was to blame for the death of the parents: the prince, or the
-counsellor's son, or Lily? You seem like a very wise man, so resolve my
-doubts on this point. If you know and do not tell me the truth, then
-your head will surely fly into a hundred pieces. And if you give a good
-answer, then I will jump from your shoulder and go back to the sissoo
-tree."
-
-Then King Triple-victory said to the goblin: "You are a master of
-magic. You surely know yourself, but I will tell you. It was not the
-fault of any of the three you mentioned. It was entirely the fault of
-King Ear-lotus."
-
-But the goblin said: "How could it be the king's fault? The other three
-did it. Are the crows to blame when the geese eat up the rice?"
-
-Then the king said: "But those three are not to blame. It was right
-for the counsellor's son to do his master's business. So he is not to
-blame. And Lily and the prince were madly in love and could not stop to
-think. They only looked after their own affairs. They are not to blame.
-
-"But the king knew the law-books very well, and he had spies to find
-out the facts among the people. And he knew about the doings of
-rascals. So he acted without thinking. He is to blame."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he wanted to test the king's constancy. So
-he went back by magic in a moment to the sissoo tree. And the king went
-back fearlessly to get him.
-
-
-
-
-SECOND GOBLIN
-
-_The Three Lovers who brought the Dead Girl to Life. Whose wife should
-she be?_
-
-
-Then King Triple-victory went back under the sissoo tree to fetch the
-goblin. And when he got there and looked about, he saw the goblin
-fallen on the ground and moaning. Then, when the king put the body with
-the goblin in it on his shoulder and started to carry him off quickly
-and silently, the goblin on his shoulder said to him: "O King, you have
-fallen into a very disagreeable task which you do not deserve. So to
-amuse you I will tell another story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the bank of the Kalindi River is a farm where a very learned Brahman
-lived. And he had a very beautiful daughter named Coral. When the
-Creator fashioned her fresh and peerless loveliness, surely he must
-have despised the cleverness he showed before in fashioning the nymphs
-of heaven.
-
-When she had grown out of childhood, there came from the city of Kanauj
-three Brahman youths, endowed with all the virtues. And each of them
-asked her father for her, that she might be his own. And though her
-father would rather have died than give her up to anyone, he made up
-his mind to give her to one of them. But the girl would not marry
-any one of them for some time, because she was afraid of hurting the
-feelings of the other two. So they stayed there all three of them day
-and night, feasting on the beauty of her face, like the birds that live
-on moonbeams.
-
-Then all at once Coral fell sick of a burning fever and died. And when
-the Brahman youths saw that she was dead, they were smitten with grief.
-But they adorned her body, took it to the cemetery, and burned it.
-
-And one of them built a hut there, slept on a bed made of her ashes,
-and got his food by begging. The second took her bones and went to
-dip them in the sacred Ganges river. And the third became a monk and
-wandered in other countries.
-
-And as he wandered, the monk came to a village called Thunderbolt,
-and was entertained in the house of a Brahman. But when he had been
-honoured by the master of the house and had begun to eat dinner there,
-the little boy began to cry and would not stop even when they petted
-him. So his mother took him on her arm, and angrily threw him into the
-blazing fire. And being tender, he was reduced to ashes in a moment.
-
-When the monk saw this, his hair stood on end, and he said: "Alas! I
-have come into the house of a devil. I will not eat this food. It would
-be like eating sin." But the master of the house said to him: "Brahman,
-I have studied to good purpose. See my skill in bringing the dead
-to life." So he opened a book, took out a magic spell, read it, and
-sprinkled water on the ashes. And the moment the water was sprinkled,
-the boy stood up alive just as before. Then the monk was highly
-delighted and finished his dinner with pleasure.
-
-And the master of the house hung the book on an ivory peg, took dinner
-with the monk, and went to bed. When he was asleep, the monk got up
-quietly, and tremblingly took the book, hoping to bring his darling
-Coral back to life. He went away and travelled night and day, until he
-finally reached the cemetery. And he caught sight of the second youth,
-who had come back after dipping the bones in the Ganges. And he also
-found the third youth, who had made a hut and lived there, sleeping on
-the girl's ashes.
-
-Then the monk cried: "Brother, leave your hut. I will bring the dear
-girl back to life." And while they eagerly questioned him, he opened
-the book, and read the magic spell, and sprinkled holy water on the
-ashes. And Coral immediately stood up, alive. And the girl was more
-beautiful than ever. She looked as if she were made of gold.
-
-When the three youths saw her come back to life like that, they went
-mad with love, and fought with one another to possess her.
-
-One said: "I brought her to life by my magic spell. She is my wife."
-
-The second said: "She came to life because of my journey to the sacred
-river. She is my wife."
-
-The third said: "I kept her ashes. That is why she came to life. She is
-my dear wife."
-
-O King, you are able to decide their dispute. Tell me. Whose wife
-should she be? If you know and say what is false, then your head will
-split.
-
-When the king heard this, he said to the goblin: "The man who painfully
-found the magic spell and brought her back to life, he did only what a
-father ought to do. He is not her husband. And the man who went to dip
-her bones in the sacred river, he did only what a son ought to do. He
-is not her husband. But the man who slept with her ashes and lived a
-hard life in the cemetery, he did what a lover ought to do. He deserves
-to be her husband."
-
-When the goblin heard this answer of King Triple-victory, he suddenly
-escaped from his shoulder and went back. And the king wished to do
-as the monk had asked him; so he decided to go back and get him.
-Great-minded people do not waver until they have kept their promises,
-even at the cost of life.
-
-
-
-
-THIRD GOBLIN
-
-_The Parrot and the Thrush. Which are worse, men or women?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree to fetch the goblin. When he
-got there, he took the body with the goblin in it on his shoulder, and
-started off in silence. And as he walked along, the goblin said to him
-again: "O King, you must be very tired, coming and going in the night.
-So to amuse you I will tell another story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Patna, the gem of the earth. And long ago a
-king lived there whose name was Lion-of-Victory. Fate had made him
-the owner of all virtues and all wealth. And he had a parrot called
-Jewel-of-Wisdom, that had divine intelligence and knew all the
-sciences, but lived as a parrot because of a curse.
-
-This king had a son called Moon, and by the advice of the parrot this
-prince married the daughter of the king of the Magadha country; and her
-name was Moonlight. Now this princess had a thrush named Moony, who was
-like the parrot, because she had learning and intelligence. And the
-parrot and the thrush lived in one cage in the palace.
-
-One day the parrot eagerly said to the thrush: "My darling, love me,
-and share my bed and my chair and my food and my amusements."
-
-But the thrush said: "I will have nothing to do with men. Men are bad
-and ungrateful."
-
-Then the parrot said: "Men are not bad. It is only women who are bad
-and cruel-hearted." And they quarrelled.
-
-Then the two birds wagered their freedom with each other and went
-to the prince to have their quarrel decided. And the prince mounted
-his father's judgment throne, and when he had heard the cause of the
-quarrel, he asked the thrush: "How are men ungrateful? Tell the truth."
-Then she said, "Listen, O Prince," and to prove her point she started
-to tell this story illustrating the faults of men.
-
-There is a famous city called Kamandaki, where a wealthy merchant lived
-named Fortune. And in time a son was born to him and named Treasure.
-Then when the father went to heaven, the young man became very unruly
-because of gambling and other vices. And the rascals came together, and
-ruined him. Association with scoundrels is the root from which springs
-the tree of calamity.
-
-So in no long time he lost all he had through his vices, and being
-ashamed of his poverty, he left his own country and went to wander in
-other places. And during his travels he came to a city called Sandal
-City, and entered the house of a merchant, seeking something to eat.
-When the merchant saw the youth, he asked him about his family, and
-finding that he was a gentleman, he entertained him. And thinking
-that Fate had sent the young man, he gave him his own daughter Pearl,
-together with some money. And when Treasure was married, he lived in
-his father-in-law's house.
-
-As time passed, he forgot his former miseries in the comforts of
-his life, and longed for the old vices, and wanted to go home. So
-the rascal managed to persuade his father-in-law, who had no other
-children, took his wife Pearl with her beautiful ornaments, and an
-old woman, and started for his own country. Presently he came to a
-wood where he said he was afraid of thieves, so he took all his wife's
-ornaments. Perceive, O Prince, how cruel and hard are the ungrateful
-hearts of those who indulge in gambling and other vices. And the
-scoundrel was ready, just for money, to kill his good wife. He threw
-her and the old woman into a pit. Then the rascal went away and the old
-woman perished there.
-
-But Pearl, with the little life she had left, managed to get out by
-clinging to the grass and bushes, and weeping bitterly, and bleeding,
-she asked the way step by step, and painfully reached her father's
-house by the way she had come. And her mother and father were surprised
-and asked her: "Why did you come back so soon, and in this condition?"
-
-And that good wife said: "On the road we were robbed, and my husband
-was forcibly carried off. And the old woman fell into a pit and died,
-but I escaped. And a kind-hearted traveller pulled me from the pit."
-Then her father and mother were saddened, but they comforted her, and
-Pearl stayed there, true to her husband.
-
-Then in time Treasure lost all his money in gambling, and he reflected:
-"I will get more money from the house of my father-in-law. I will go
-there and tell my father-in-law that his daughter is well and is at my
-house."
-
-So he went again to his father-in-law. And as he went, his
-ever-faithful wife saw him afar off. She ran and fell at the rascal's
-feet and told him all the story that she had invented for her parents.
-For the heart of a faithful wife does not change even when she learns
-that her husband is a rogue.
-
-Then that rascal went without fear into the house of his father-in-law
-and bowed low before his feet. And his father-in-law rejoiced when he
-saw him and made a great feast with his relatives, for he said: "My son
-is delivered alive from the robbers. Heaven be praised!" Then Treasure
-enjoyed the wealth of his father-in-law and lived with his wife Pearl.
-
-Now one night this worst of scoundrels did what I ought not to repeat,
-but I will tell it, or my story would be spoiled. Listen, O Prince.
-While Pearl lay asleep trusting him, that wretch killed her in the
-night, stole all her jewels, and escaped to his own country. This shows
-how bad and ungrateful men are.
-
-When the thrush had told her story, the prince smiled and said to the
-parrot: "It is your turn now."
-
-Then the parrot said: "Your Majesty, women are cruel and reckless and
-bad. To prove it, I will tell a story. Listen."
-
-There is a city called Joyful, where lived a prince of merchants named
-Virtue, who owned millions of money. He had a daughter named Fortune,
-peerless in beauty, dearer to him than life. And she was given in
-marriage to a merchant's son from Copper City, whose name was Ocean. He
-was her equal in wealth, beauty, and family; a delight to the eyes of
-men.
-
-One day when her husband was away from home, she saw from the window a
-handsome young man. And the moment she saw him, the fickle girl went
-mad with love, and secretly sent a messenger to invite him in, and made
-love to him in secret. Thus her heart was fixed on him alone, and she
-was happy with him.
-
-But at last her husband came home and delighted the hearts of his
-parents-in-law. And when the day had been spent in feasting, Fortune
-was adorned by her mother, and sent to her husband's room. But she was
-cold toward him and pretended to sleep. And her husband went to sleep,
-too, for he was weary with his journey, and had been drinking wine.
-
-When everyone in the house had gone to sleep after their dinner, a
-thief made a hole in the wall and came into that very room. And just
-then the merchant's daughter got up without seeing him, and went out
-secretly to a meeting with her lover. And the thief was disappointed,
-and thought: "She has gone out into the night wearing the very jewels
-that I came to steal. I must see where she goes." So the thief went out
-and followed her.
-
-But she met a woman friend who had flowers in her hand, and went to a
-park not very far away. And there she saw the man whom she came to meet
-hanging on a tree. For the policeman had thought he was a thief, had
-put a rope around his neck and hanged him.
-
-And at the sight she went distracted, and lamented pitifully: "Oh, oh!
-I am undone," and fell on the ground and wept. Then she took her lover
-down from the tree and made him sit up, though he was dead, and adorned
-him with perfumes and jewels and flowers.
-
-But when in her love-madness she lifted his face and kissed him, a
-goblin who had come to live in her dead lover, bit off her nose. And
-she was startled and ran in pain from the spot. But then she came back
-to see if perhaps he was alive after all. But the goblin had gone, and
-she saw that he was motionless and dead. So she slowly went back home,
-frightened and disgraced and weeping.
-
-And the concealed thief saw it all and thought: "What has the wicked
-woman done? Alas! Can women be so dreadful as this? What might she not
-do next?" So out of curiosity the thief still followed her from afar.
-
-And the wretched woman entered the house and cried aloud, and said:
-"Save me from my cruel enemy, my own husband. He cut off my nose and
-I had done nothing." And her servants heard her cries and all arose in
-excitement. Her husband too awoke. Then her father came and saw that
-her nose was cut off, and in his anger he had his son-in-law arrested.
-
-[Illustration: The thrush suddenly became a goddess.]
-
-And the poor man did not know what to do. Even when he was being
-bound, he remained silent and said nothing. Then they all woke up and
-heard the story, but the thief who knew the whole truth, ran away. And
-when day came, the merchant's son was haled before the king by his
-father-in-law. And Fortune went there without her nose, and the king
-heard the whole story and condemned the merchant's son to death for
-mistreating his wife.
-
-So the innocent, bewildered man was led to the place of execution and
-the drums were beaten. Just then the thief came up and said to the
-king's men: "Why do you kill this man without any good reason? I know
-how the whole thing happened. Take me to the king, and I will tell all."
-
-So all the king's men took him to the king. And the thief told the
-king all the adventures of the night, and said: "Your Majesty, if you
-cannot trust my word, you may find the nose at this moment between the
-teeth of the dead body."
-
-Then the king sent men to investigate, and when he found it was true,
-he released the merchant's son from the punishment of death. As for
-wretched Fortune, he cut off her ears, too, and banished her from the
-country. And he took from her father, the merchant, all his money, and
-made the thief the chief of police. He was pleased with him.
-
-O Prince, this shows how cruel and false women are by nature.
-
-As he spoke these words, the parrot changed into a god, for the curse
-was fulfilled, and went to heaven like a god. And the thrush suddenly
-became a goddess, for her curse was at an end, and flew up likewise to
-heaven. So their dispute was never settled at that court.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king: "O King, tell
-me. Are men bad, or women? If you know and do not tell, your head will
-fly to pieces." And when the king heard these words of the goblin on
-his shoulder, he said to that magic goblin: "O goblin! Here and there,
-now and then, there is an occasional bad man like that. But women are
-usually bad. We hear about many of them."
-
-Then the goblin disappeared from the king's shoulder as before. And the
-king tried again to catch him.
-
-
-
-
-FOURTH GOBLIN
-
-_King Shudraka and Hero's Family. Which of the five deserves the most
-honour?_
-
-
-Then King Triple-victory went back under the sissoo tree and caught the
-goblin, who gave a horse-laugh. But the king without fear put him on
-his shoulder as before and started toward the monk. And as he walked
-along, the goblin on his shoulder said to him again: "O King, why do
-you take such pains for that wretched monk? Have you no sense about
-this fruitless task? Well, after all, I like your devotion. So, to
-amuse the weary journey, I will tell you another story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Beautiful, and it deserves the name. There lived
-a king named Shudraka, of tremendous power and mighty courage. He was
-so used to victory that the fire of his courage was kept blazing by
-the wind from the fans in the hands of the wives of his vanquished
-foes. Under his rule the earth was rich and always good, as in the days
-of old. And he was fond of brave men.
-
-Now one day a Brahman named Hero came from Malwa to pay his homage
-to this king. He had a wife named Virtue, a son named Trusty, and a
-daughter named Heroic. And he had just three servants, a dagger at
-his hip, a sword in his hand, and a shield in his other hand. These
-were all the servants he had when he asked the king for five hundred
-gold-pieces a day as his wages.
-
-And the king thought from his appearance that he was a remarkably brave
-man, so he gave him the wages he asked. But out of curiosity he put
-spies on his track, to learn what he did with all the money.
-
-Now Hero called on the king in the morning, and at noon he took his
-sword and stood at the palace gate and divided his daily salary.
-One hundred gold-pieces he gave to his wife for food and household
-expenses. And with another hundred he bought clothes and perfumes and
-nuts and such things. And another hundred he devoted to the worship of
-Vishnu and Shiva, after taking the ceremonial bath. And the two hundred
-which were left he gave to Brahmans and the unhappy and the poor. This
-was the way he divided and spent the money every day. Then after he had
-sacrificed and eaten dinner, he stood every night alone at the palace
-gate with his sword and shield. All this King Shudraka learned from his
-spies and was greatly pleased and forbad the spies to follow him again.
-For he thought him a wonderful man, worthy of especial honour.
-
-Then one day a veil of clouds covered the sky and poured down rain in
-streams day and night, so that the highway was quite deserted. Only
-Hero was at his post as usual by the palace gate. And when the sun set
-and dreadful darkness was spread abroad and the rain fell in sheets,
-the king wished to test Hero's behaviour. So at night he climbed to the
-palace roof and cried: "Who is there at the gate?" And Hero answered:
-"I am here." And the king thought: "How steadfast this man Hero is,
-and how devoted to me! I must surely give him a greater post." And he
-descended from the roof and entered the palace and went to bed.
-
-The next night it rained again in sheets and the world was wrapped
-in the darkness of death. And again the king thought to test his
-behaviour, and climbing to the roof he called out toward the palace
-gate: "Who is there?" And when Hero said: "I am here, your Majesty,"
-the king was greatly astonished.
-
-Just then he heard at a distance a sweet-voiced woman crying. And he
-thought: "Who is this who laments so piteously, as if in deep despair?
-In my kingdom there is no violence, no poor man and none distressed.
-Who can she be?" And being merciful, he called to Hero, who stood
-below: "Listen, Hero. A woman is weeping at some distance. Go and learn
-why she weeps and who she is." And Hero said "Certainly," arranged his
-dagger, took his sword in his hand, and started. He did not even think
-of the pelting hail, the flashing lightning, or the rain and darkness.
-And when the king saw him setting out alone in a night like that, he
-was filled with pity and curiosity, and descending from the palace
-roof, took his sword and followed all alone, without being seen.
-
-As Hero traced the sound of crying, he came to a beautiful lake outside
-the city, and there he saw a woman in the midst of the water, lamenting
-in these words: "Alas for you, brave and merciful and generous! How
-shall I live without you?"
-
-And Hero was amazed, and timidly asked her: "Who are you, and why do
-you weep?" And she replied: "O Hero, I am the Goddess of the Earth,
-and now my lord, this virtuous King Shudraka, is going to die in three
-days. How shall I find another such master? So I am distracted with
-grief, and I lament."
-
-When Hero heard this, he was frightened and said: "Goddess, is there
-any remedy for this, any way in which the king might be saved?" And the
-goddess answered: "There is just one remedy, my son, and it is in your
-hands." And Hero said: "Goddess, tell me quickly, that I may adopt it
-at once. What good would life be to us otherwise?"
-
-Then the goddess said: "My son, there is no other man devoted to his
-master as you are: so you may learn how to save him. There is a temple
-to the Dreadful Goddess built by that king near his palace. If you
-sacrifice your son to her at once, then the king will not die. He will
-live another hundred years. If you do it this very night, then the
-blessing will come, not otherwise."
-
-And Hero, the hero, replied: "Then I will go, Goddess, and do it this
-moment." And the Goddess of the Earth said: "Good fortune go with you,"
-and she vanished. And the king, who had followed secretly, heard it
-all. So he still followed to find out how Hero would behave.
-
-But Hero went straight home, woke his wife Virtue, and told her all
-that the Goddess of the Earth had said. And his wife said: "My dear, if
-so much depends on it, wake the boy and tell him." Then Hero woke the
-little boy, told him all, and said: "My boy, if you are sacrificed to
-the Dreadful Goddess, our king will live. If not, he will die in three
-days."
-
-And the boy was true to his name. Without fear and without hesitation
-he said: "My dear father, I am a lucky boy if the king lives at the
-cost of my life. Besides, that would pay for the food we have eaten.
-Why then delay? Take me quickly and sacrifice me to the goddess. May
-the king's evil fate be averted by my death!" And Hero was delighted
-and congratulated him, saying: "Well said! You are indeed my son."
-
-[Illustration: Trusty worshipped the goddess and bravely saluted her.]
-
-So Hero's wife Virtue and his daughter Heroic went through the night
-with Hero and Trusty to the temple of the Dreadful Goddess. The king
-too followed them, disguised and unnoticed. Then the father took Trusty
-from his shoulder in the presence of the goddess. And Trusty worshipped
-the goddess, and bravely saluted her, and said: "O Goddess, by the
-sacrifice of my head may the king live another hundred years and rule a
-thornless kingdom."
-
-And as he prayed, Hero cut off his head and offered it to the Dreadful
-Goddess, saying: "May the king live at the cost of my son's life!" Then
-a voice cried from heaven: "O Hero, who else is devoted to his master
-as you are? You have given life and royal power to the king at the cost
-of your only son, and such a son." All this the king himself saw and
-heard.
-
-Then Hero's daughter Heroic kissed the lips of her dead brother, and
-was blinded with sorrow, and her heart broke, and she died.
-
-Then Hero's wife Virtue said: "My dear, we have done our duty by the
-king. And you see how my daughter died of grief. So now I say: What
-good is life to me without my children? I was a fool before. I should
-have given my own head to save the king. So now permit me to burn
-myself at once."
-
-And when she insisted, Hero said: "Do so. What happiness is there in
-a life of constant mourning for your children? And as for your giving
-your own life instead, do not grieve about that. If there had been any
-other way, I should of course have given my life. So wait a moment. I
-will build you a funeral pile out of these logs." So he built the pile
-and lighted it.
-
-And Virtue fell at her husband's feet, then worshipped the Dreadful
-Goddess, and prayed: "O Goddess, may I have the same husband in another
-life, and may this same King Shudraka be saved at the cost of my son's
-life." And she died in the blazing fire.
-
-Then Hero thought: "I have done my duty by the king, as the heavenly
-voice admitted. And I have paid for the king's food which I have eaten.
-So now why should I want to live alone? It is not right for a man like
-me to go on living at the expense of all the family which I ought to
-support. Why should I not please the goddess by sacrificing myself?"
-
-So Hero first approached the goddess with a hymn of praise: "O
-Demon-slayer! Saviour! Devil-killer! Trident-holder! Joy of the wise!
-Protectress of the universe! Victory to thee, O best of mothers, whose
-feet the world adores! O fearless refuge of the pious! Kali of the
-dreadful ornaments! Honour and glory to thee, O kindly goddess! Be
-pleased to accept the sacrifice of my head in behalf of King Shudraka."
-Then he suddenly cut off his own head with his dagger.
-
-King Shudraka beheld this from his hiding-place, and was filled with
-amazement and grief and admiration. And he thought: "I have never seen
-or heard the like of this. That good man and his family have done a
-hard thing for me. In this strange world who else is so brave as that,
-to give his son, his family, and his life for his king? If I should not
-make a full return for his kindness, my kingdom would mean nothing to
-me, and my life would be the life of a beast. If I lost my virtue, it
-would all be a disgrace to me."
-
-So the king drew his sword and approached the goddess and prayed: "O
-Goddess, I have always been devoted to you. Now be pleased with the
-sacrifice of my body, and grant my prayer. Bring back to life this
-virtuous man Hero and his family, who gave their lives for me."
-
-But when he started to cut off his own head, there came a voice
-from heaven: "My son, do nothing rash. I am well pleased with your
-character. The Brahman Hero and his children and his wife shall come
-back to life." And when the voice ceased, Hero stood up alive and
-uninjured with his son and his daughter and his wife. Then the king hid
-himself again and looked on with eyes filled with tears of joy, and
-could not see enough of them.
-
-Now Hero, like a man awaking from a dream, gazed at his son and his
-wife and his daughter, and was greatly perplexed. He spoke to each by
-name, and asked them how they had come to life after being reduced to
-ashes. "Is this a fancy of mine? Or a dream? Or an illusion? Or the
-favour of the goddess?" And his wife and children said to him: "By the
-favour of the goddess we are alive."
-
-At last Hero believed it, and having worshipped the goddess, he went
-home happy with his children and his wife. And when he had seen his son
-and his wife and daughter safe at home, he went back that same night to
-the palace gate.
-
-And King Shudraka saw all this and went back without being seen
-himself, and climbed to the roof, and called: "Who is there at the
-gate?" And Hero replied: "Your Majesty, I, Hero, am here. At your
-command I followed the woman who cried. She must have been a witch, for
-she vanished the moment I saw her and spoke to her."
-
-When the king heard this, he was astonished beyond measure, for he had
-seen what really happened. And he thought: "Ah, the hearts of brave men
-are deep as the sea, if they do not boast after doing an unparalleled
-action." So the king descended from the roof, entered the palace, and
-passed the rest of the night there.
-
-Then when the court was held in the morning, Hero came to see the king.
-And as he stood there, the delighted king told all his counsellors and
-the others the story of the night. And all were amazed and confounded
-at hearing of Hero's virtues, and they praised him, crying: "Well done!
-Well done!"
-
-Then the king and Hero lived happily together, sharing the power
-equally.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked King Triple-victory: "O
-King, which of all these was the most worthy? If you know and will not
-tell, then the curse I told you of will be fulfilled."
-
-And the king said to the goblin: "O magic creature, King Shudraka was
-the most noble of them all."
-
-But the goblin said: "Why not Hero, the like of whom as a servant is
-not to be found in the whole world? Or why should not his wife receive
-the most praise, who did not waver when she saw her son killed like a
-beast before her eyes? Or why is not the boy Trusty the most worthy,
-who showed such wonderful manhood when only a little boy? Why do you
-say that King Shudraka was the best among them?"
-
-Then the king answered the goblin: "Not Hero. He was a gentleman born,
-so it was his duty to save his king at the cost of life, wife and
-children. And his wife was a lady, a faithful wife who only did what
-was right in following her husband. And Trusty was their son, and like
-them. For the cloth is always like the threads. But the king has a
-right to use his subjects' lives to save his own. So when Shudraka gave
-his life for them, he proved himself the best of all."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he jumped from the king's shoulder and went
-back to his home without being seen. And the king was not disturbed by
-this magic, but started back through the night to catch him.
-
-
-
-
-FIFTH GOBLIN
-
- _The Brave Man, the Wise Man, and the Clever Man. To which should the
- girl be given?_
-
-
-Then King Triple-victory went back to the sissoo tree and saw the
-body with the goblin in it hanging there just as before. He took it
-down without being frightened by all its twistings and writhings, and
-quickly set out again. And as he walked along in silence as before, the
-goblin said: "O King, you are obstinate, and you are pleasing to look
-at. So to amuse you, I will tell another story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Ujjain, famous throughout the world. There lived
-a king named Merit, who had as counsellor a Brahman named Hariswami,
-adorned with all noble virtues. The counsellor had a worthy wife, and a
-son named Devaswami was born to her, and was as good as she. And they
-had one daughter named Moonlight, who was worthy of her name, for she
-was famous for her matchless beauty and charm.
-
-When the girl had grown out of childhood, she was proud of her
-wonderful beauty, and she told her mother, her father, and her brother:
-"I will marry a brave man or a wise man or a clever man. I should die
-if I were married to anyone else."
-
-Now while her father was busy looking for such a husband for her, he
-was sent by King Merit to another king in the southern country to
-make a treaty for war and peace. When he had finished his business, a
-Brahman youth, who had heard of his daughter's beauty, came and asked
-him for her.
-
-And he said: "My daughter will not marry anyone unless he is a clever
-man or a wise man or a brave man. Which of these are you? Tell me."
-And the Brahman said: "I am a clever man." "Show me," said the father,
-and the clever man made a flying chariot by his skill. Then he took
-Hariswami in this magic chariot, and carried him to the sky. And he
-took the delighted father to the camp of the king of the southern
-country where he had been on business. Then Hariswami appointed the
-marriage for the seventh day.
-
-At this time another Brahman youth in Ujjain came to the girl's brother
-and asked him for her. And when he was told that she would marry only
-a wise man or a clever man or a brave man, he said he was a brave man.
-Then when he had shown his skill with weapons, the brother promised his
-sister to the brave man. And without telling his mother, he consulted
-the star-gazers and appointed the marriage for the seventh day.
-
-At the same time a third Brahman youth came to the girl's mother and
-asked for the girl. And the mother said: "My son, a wise man or a
-clever man or a brave man shall marry my daughter, but no one else.
-Which of these are you? Tell me." And he said: "I am a wise man." So
-she asked him about the past and the future, and found that he was a
-wise man. Then she promised to give him her daughter on the seventh day.
-
-The next day Hariswami came home and told his wife and his son all that
-he had done. And she and he each told him all that she or he had done.
-So Hariswami was greatly perplexed, because three bridegrooms had been
-invited. Then the seventh day came and the three bridegrooms came to
-Hariswami's house.
-
-Strange to say, at that moment Moonlight disappeared. Then the wise
-man said: "A giant named Smoke-tail has carried her to his den in the
-Vindhya forest."
-
-When Hariswami heard this from the wise man, he was frightened and
-asked the clever man to find a remedy for the trouble. And the clever
-man made a chariot as before, full of all kinds of weapons, and brought
-Hariswami with the wise man and the brave man in a moment to the
-Vindhya forest. And the wise man showed them the giant's den.
-
-When the giant saw what had happened, he came out in anger, and the
-brave man fought with him. Then came a famous duel with strange weapons
-between a man and a giant for the sake of a woman, like the ancient
-fight between Rama and Ravana. Though the giant was a terrible fighter,
-the brave man presently cut off his head with an arrow shaped like a
-half-moon. When the giant was killed, they found Moonlight in the
-den and all went back to Ujjain in the clever man's chariot.
-
-[Illustration: The giant came out in anger and the brave man fought
-with him.]
-
-Then when the proper time for the wedding came, there arose a great
-dispute among the three in Hariswami's house.
-
-The wise man said: "If I had not discovered her by my wisdom, how could
-you have found her hiding-place? She should be given to me."
-
-The clever man said: "If I had not made a flying chariot, how could you
-have gone there in a moment and come back like the gods, or how could
-you have had a chariot-fight with him? She should be given to me."
-
-The brave man said: "If I had not killed the giant in the fight, who
-would have saved her in spite of all your pains? The girl should be
-given to me."
-
-And as they quarrelled, Hariswami stood silent, confused, and perplexed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he said to the king: "O King, do
-you say to which of them she should be given. If you know and will not
-tell, then your head will split into a hundred pieces."
-
-Then the king broke silence and said: "She should be given to the brave
-man, who risked his life and killed the giant and saved the girl. The
-wise man and the clever man were only helpers whom Fate gave him. A
-star-gazer and a chariot-maker work for other people, do they not?"
-
-When the goblin heard this answer, he suddenly escaped from the king's
-shoulder and went back. And the king determined to get him, and went
-again to the sissoo tree.
-
-
-
-
-SIXTH GOBLIN
-
- _The Girl who transposed the Heads of her Husband and Brother. Which
- combination of head and body is her husband?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder as before, and started in silence toward the monk. And the
-goblin said to him: "O King, you are wise and good, so I am pleased
-with you. To amuse you, therefore, I will tell you another story with a
-puzzle in it. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long ago there was a king named Glory-banner in the world. His city was
-named Beautiful. And in this city was a splendid temple to the goddess
-Gauri. And to the right of the temple was a lake called Bath of Gauri.
-And on a certain day in each year a great crowd of people came there on
-a pilgrimage from all directions to bathe.
-
-One day a laundryman named White came there from another village to
-bathe. And the youth saw a maiden who had also come there to bathe. Her
-name was Lovely, and her father's name was Clean-cloth. She robbed the
-moon of its beauty and White of his heart. So he inquired about her
-name and family and went home lovesick.
-
-When he got there, he was ill and could not eat without her. And when
-his mother asked him, he told her what was in his heart, but did not
-change his habits. But she went and told her husband, whose name was
-Spotless.
-
-So Spotless went and saw how his son was acting, and said: "My son, why
-should you be downcast? Your desire is not hard to obtain. For if I ask
-Clean-cloth, he will surely give you his daughter. We are not inferior
-to him in birth, wealth, or social position. I know him and he knows
-me. So there is no difficulty about it." Thus Spotless comforted his
-son, made him eat and take care of himself, went with him the next day
-to Clean-cloth's house, and asked that the girl might be given to his
-son White. And Clean-cloth graciously promised to give her to him.
-
-Then when the time came, Clean-cloth gave White his charming daughter,
-a wife worthy of him. And when he was married, White went happily to
-his father's house with his sweet bride.
-
-Now as he lived there happily, Lovely's brother came to visit. And when
-they had all asked him about his health and his sister had greeted
-him with a kiss, and after he had rested, he said: "My father sent me
-to invite Lovely and White to a festival in our house." And all the
-relatives said it was a good plan and entertained him that day with
-appropriate things to drink and eat.
-
-The next morning White set out for his father-in-law's house, together
-with his brother-in-law and Lovely. And when he came to the city
-Beautiful, he saw the great temple of Gauri. And he said to Lovely
-and her brother: "We will see this goddess. I will go first and you
-two stay here." So White went in to see the goddess. He entered the
-temple and bowed before the goddess whose eighteen arms had killed the
-horrible demons, whose lotus-feet were set upon a giant that she had
-crushed.
-
-And when he had worshipped her, an idea suddenly came to him. "People
-honour this goddess with all kinds of living sacrifices. Why should I
-not win her favour by sacrificing myself?" And he fetched a sword from
-a deserted inner room, cut off his own head, and let it fall on the
-floor.
-
-Presently his brother-in-law entered the temple to see why he delayed
-so long. And when he saw his brother-in-law with his head cut off, he
-went mad with grief, and cut off his own head in the same way with the
-same sword.
-
-Then when he failed to come out, Lovely was alarmed and entered the
-temple. And when she saw her husband and her brother in that condition,
-she cried: "Alas! This is the end of me!" and fell weeping to the
-floor. But presently she rose, lamenting for the pair so unexpectedly
-dead, and thought: "What is my life good for now?"
-
-Before killing herself, she prayed to the goddess: "O Goddess! One only
-deity of happiness and character! Partaker of the life of Shiva!
-Refuge of all women-folk! Destroyer of grief! Why have you killed my
-husband and my brother at one fell swoop? It was not right, for I was
-always devoted to you. Then be my refuge when I pray to you, and hear
-my one pitiful prayer. I shall leave this wretched body of mine on this
-spot, but in every future life of mine, O Goddess, may I have the same
-husband and brother." Thus she prayed, praised, and worshipped the
-goddess, then tied a rope to an ashoka tree which grew there.
-
-[Illustration: "Do nothing rash, my daughter, leave the rope alone."]
-
-But while she was arranging the rope about her neck, a voice from
-heaven cried: "Do nothing rash, my daughter. Leave the rope alone.
-Though you are young, I am pleased with your unusual goodness. Place
-the two heads on the two bodies and they shall rise up again and live
-through my favour."
-
-So Lovely left the rope alone and joyfully went to the bodies. But
-in her great hurry and confusion she made a mistake. She put her
-husband's head on her brother's body and her brother's head on her
-husband's body. Then they arose, sound and well, like men awaking from
-a dream. And they were all delighted to hear one another's adventures,
-worshipped the goddess, and went on their way.
-
-Now as she walked along, Lovely noticed that she had made a mistake in
-their heads. And she was troubled and did not know what to do.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king: "O King, when
-they were mingled in this way, which should be her husband? If you know
-and do not tell, then the curse I spoke of will be fulfilled."
-
-And the king said to the goblin: "The body with the husband's head on
-it is her husband. For the head is the most important member. It is by
-the head that we recognize people."
-
-Then the goblin slipped from the king's shoulder as before, and quickly
-disappeared. And the king went back, determined to catch him.
-
-
-
-
-SEVENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Mutual Services of King Fierce-lion and Prince Good. Which is the
-more deserving?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder as before, and started. And as he walked along, the goblin
-said: "O King, I will tell you a story to amuse your weariness. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the shore of the Eastern Ocean is Copper City. There a king named
-Fierce-lion lived. He turned his back to other men's wives, but not to
-fighting men. He destroyed his enemies, but not other men's wealth.
-
-One day a popular prince named Good came from the south to the king's
-gate. He introduced himself, but did not get what he wanted from the
-king. And he thought: "If I am born a prince, why am I so poor? And if
-I am to be poor, why did God give me so many desires? For this king
-pays no attention to me, though I wait upon him and grow weary and
-faint with hunger."
-
-While he was thinking, the king went hunting. He went with many
-horsemen and footmen, and the prince ran along in the dress of a
-pilgrim with a club in his hand. And during the hunt the king chased
-a great boar a long distance, and so came into another forest. There
-he lost sight of the boar, for the trail was covered with leaves and
-grass. And the king was tired and lost his way in the forest. Only the
-pilgrim-prince thought nothing of his life, and hungry and thirsty as
-he was, he followed on foot the king who rode a swift horse.
-
-And when the king saw him following, he spoke lovingly: "My good man,
-do you perhaps know the way we came?"
-
-And the pilgrim bowed low and said: "I know, your Majesty. But first
-rest yourself a moment. The blazing sun, the middle jewel in the girdle
-of heaven's bride, is terribly hot." Then the king said eagerly: "See
-if there is water anywhere."
-
-And the pilgrim agreed and climbed a high tree and looked around. And
-he saw a river and climbed down and took the king to it. He unsaddled
-the horse, gave him water and grass, and let him rest. And when the
-king had bathed, the pilgrim took two fine mangoes from his skirt,
-washed them and gave them to the king.
-
-"Where did you get these?" asked the king, and the pilgrim bowed and
-said: "Your Majesty, I have lived on such food for ten years. While
-I was serving your Majesty, I had to live like a monk." And the king
-said: "What can I say? You deserve your name of Good." And he was
-filled with pity and shame, and thought: "A curse on kings, who do not
-know whether their servants are happy or not! And a curse on their
-attendants, who do not tell them this and that!" And when the pilgrim
-insisted, the king was prevailed on to take the two mangoes. He rested
-there with the pilgrim and ate the mangoes and drank water with the
-pilgrim, who was accustomed to eat mangoes and drink water.
-
-Then the pilgrim saddled the horse and went ahead to show the way, and
-at last, at the king's command, mounted behind on the horse; so the
-king found his soldiers and went safely home. And when he got there, he
-proclaimed the devotion of the pilgrim, and made him a rich man, but
-could not feel that he had paid his debt. So Good stayed there happily
-with King Fierce-lion and stopped living as a pilgrim.
-
-One day the king sent Good to Ceylon to ask for the hand of the
-daughter of the King of Ceylon. So he set out after sacrificing to the
-proper god, and entered a ship with some Brahmans chosen by the king.
-And when the ship had safely reached the middle of the ocean, there
-suddenly arose from the waves a very large flag-pole made of gold,
-with a top that touched the sky. It was adorned with waving banners of
-various colours and was quite astonishing.
-
-At the same moment the clouds gathered, it began to rain violently,
-and a mighty wind blew. And the ship was driven by the storm winds and
-caught on the flag-pole. Then the pole began to sink, dragging the ship
-with it into the raging waves. And the Brahmans who were there were
-overcome with fear and cursed the name of their king Fierce-lion.
-
-[Illustration: Good sank into the ocean, and when he looked about he
-saw a wonderful city.]
-
-But Good could not endure that because of his devotion to his king.
-He took his sword in his hand, girt up his garment, and threw himself
-after the flag-pole into the sea. He had no fear of the pole which
-seemed a refuge from the ocean. Then as he sank, the ship was battered
-by the winds and waves and broke up. And all in it fell into the mouths
-of sharks.
-
-But Good sank into the ocean, and when he looked about he saw a
-wonderful city. There he entered a shrine to Gauri, tall as the
-heavenly mountain, with great gem-sprinkled banners on walls made of
-different kinds of jewels, in a golden temple blazing with jewelled
-pillars, with a garden that had a pool, the stairs to which were made
-of splendid gems. After he had bowed low and praised and worshipped the
-goddess there, he sat down before her in amazement, wondering if it was
-all a conjuror's trick.
-
-Just then the door was suddenly opened by a heavenly maiden. Her eyes
-were like lotuses, her face like the moon. She had a smile like a
-flower and a body soft as lotus-stems. And a thousand women waited
-upon her. She entered the shrine of the goddess and the heart of Good
-at the same moment. And when she had worshipped the goddess there, she
-went out from the shrine, but not from the heart of Good.
-
-She entered a circle of light, and Good followed her. And he saw
-another splendid house, that seemed like a place of meeting for all
-riches and all enjoyments. And he saw the girl sitting on a jewelled
-couch, and he approached and sat beside her. He was like a man painted
-in a picture, for his eyes were fastened on her face.
-
-Now a servant of the maiden saw that his body was thrilled, that
-he was intent upon the maiden, that he was in love. She understood
-his feelings and said to him: "Sir, you are our guest. Enjoy the
-hospitality of my mistress. Arise. Bathe. Eat." And he felt a little
-hope at her words and went to a pool in the garden which she showed him.
-
-He plunged into the pool, and when he rose to the surface, he found
-himself in the pool of King Fierce-lion in Copper City. And when he
-saw that he had come there so suddenly, he thought: "Oh, what does it
-mean? Where is that heavenly garden? What a difference between the
-sight of that girl which was like nectar to me, and this immediate
-separation from her which is like terrible poison! It was no dream. I
-was awake when the serving-maid deceived me and made a fool of me."
-
-He was like a madman without the girl. He wandered in the garden
-and mourned in a lovelorn way. He was surrounded by wind-blown
-flower-pollen which seemed to him the yellow flames of separation. And
-when the gardener saw him in this state, he went and told the king.
-
-And the king was troubled. He went himself to see Good, and asked him
-soothingly: "What does this mean? Tell me, my friend. Where did you go?
-And where did you come? And where did you stay? And what did you fall
-into?"
-
-Then Good told him the whole adventure. And the king thought: "Ah, it
-is fortunate for me that this brave man is lovelorn. For now I have a
-chance to pay my debt to him." So the king said to him: "My friend,
-give over this vain grief. I will go with you by the same road, and
-bring you to the heavenly maiden." So he comforted Good, and made him
-take a bath.
-
-The next day he transferred his royal duties to his counsellors and
-entered a ship with Good. Good showed the way through the sea and they
-saw the flag-pole with its banners rising as before in the middle of
-the ocean. Then Good said to the king: "Your Majesty, here is the magic
-flag-pole standing up. When I sink down there, you must sink too along
-the flag-pole." So when they came near the sinking pole, Good jumped
-first, and the king followed him.
-
-They sank down and came to the heavenly city. And the king was
-astonished, and after he had worshipped the goddess, he sat down with
-Good. Then the girl, like Beauty personified, came out of the circle of
-light with her friends. "There she is, the lovely creature," said Good,
-and the king thought: "He is quite right to love her." But when she saw
-the king looking like a god, she wondered who the strange and wonderful
-man might be, and entered the shrine to worship the goddess.
-
-But the king took Good and went into the garden to show how little he
-cared about her. A moment later the girl came from the shrine; she had
-been praying for a good husband. And she said to a girl friend: "My
-friend, I wonder where I could see the man who was here. Where is the
-great man? You girls must hunt for him and ask him to be good enough to
-come and accept our hospitality. For he is a wonderful man, and we must
-be polite to him."
-
-So the girl found him in the garden and gave him her mistress' message
-very respectfully. But the brave king spoke loftily to her: "Your words
-are hospitality enough. Nothing else is necessary."
-
-Now when her mistress had heard what he said, she thought he was a
-noble character, better than anybody else. She was attracted by the
-courage of the king in refusing a sort of hospitality which was almost
-too much to offer a mere man, and thought about the fulfilment of her
-prayer for a husband. So she went into the garden herself. She drew
-near to the king and lovingly begged him to accept her hospitality.
-
-But the king pointed to Good and said: "My dear girl, he told me of the
-goddess here, and I came to see her. And by following the flag-pole I
-saw the goddess and her very marvellous temple. It was only afterwards
-that I happened to see you."
-
-Then the girl said: "O King, you may be interested in seeing a city
-which is the wonder of the three worlds." And the king laughed and
-said: "He told me about that, too. I believe there is a pool for
-bathing there." And the girl said: "O King, do not say that. I am not
-a deceitful girl. Why should I deceive an honourable man, especially
-as your noble character has made me feel like a servant? Pray do not
-refuse me."
-
-So the king agreed and went with Good and the girl to the edge of the
-circle of light. There a door opened and he entered and saw another
-heavenly city like a second hill of heaven; for it was built of gems
-and gold, and the flowers and fruits of every season grew there at the
-same time.
-
-And the princess seated the king on a splendid throne and brought him
-gifts and said: "Your Majesty, I am the daughter of the great god
-Black-wheel. But Vishnu sent my father to heaven. And I inherited these
-two magic cities where one has everything he wants. There is no old age
-or death to trouble us here. And now you are in the place of my father
-to rule over the cities and over me." So she offered him herself and
-all she had. But the king said: "In that case you are my daughter and I
-give you in marriage to my brave friend Good."
-
-In the king's words she saw the fulfilment of her prayer, and being
-sensible and modest, she agreed. So the king married them and gave all
-the magic wealth to happy Good, and said: "My friend, I have paid you
-now for one of the two mangoes which I ate. But I remain in your debt
-for the second."
-
-Then he asked the princess how he could get back to his city. And she
-gave the king a sword called Invincible, and the magic fruit which
-wards off birth, old age, and death. And the king took the sword and
-the fruit, plunged into the pool which she showed him, and came up in
-his own country, feeling completely successful. But Good ruled happily
-over the kingdom of the princess.
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king: "O King, which
-of these two deserves more credit for plunging into the sea?"
-
-And the king was afraid of the curse, so he gave a true answer:
-"Good seems to me the more deserving, for he did not know the truth
-beforehand, but plunged without hope into the sea, while the king knew
-the truth when he jumped."
-
-And as soon as the king broke silence, the goblin slipped from his
-shoulder as before without being seen and went to the sissoo tree. And
-the king tried as before to catch him. Brave men do not waver until
-they have finished what they have begun.
-
-
-
-
-EIGHTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Specialist in Food, the Specialist in Women, and the Specialist in
-Cotton. Which is the cleverest?_
-
-
-So the king went back under the sissoo tree, caught the goblin just as
-before, put him on his shoulder, and started toward the monk. And as
-he walked along, the goblin on his shoulder spoke and said: "O King,
-listen once more to the following story to beguile your weariness."
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Anga country there is a great region called Forest. There lived
-a great Brahman, pious and wealthy, whose name was Vishnuswami. To his
-worthy wife three sons were born, one after another. When they had
-grown to be young men, specialists in matters of luxury, they were sent
-one day by their father to find a turtle for a sacrifice which he had
-begun.
-
-So the brothers went to the ocean and there they found a turtle. Then
-the eldest said to the two younger: "One of you take this turtle for
-Father's sacrifice. I cannot carry a slimy thing that smells raw."
-
-But when the eldest said this, the two younger said: "Sir, if you feel
-disgust, why shouldn't we?"
-
-When the eldest heard this, he said: "You take the turtle, otherwise
-Father's sacrifice will be ruined on your account. Then you and Father
-too will surely go to hell."
-
-When they heard him, the two younger brothers laughed and said: "Sir,
-you seem to know our common duty, but not your own."
-
-Then the eldest said: "What! Are you not aware that I am a connoisseur
-in food? For I am a specialist in foods. How can I touch this loathsome
-thing?"
-
-When he heard these words, the second brother said: "But I am even more
-of a connoisseur. I am a specialist in women. So how can I touch it?"
-
-After this speech, the eldest said to the youngest: "Do you then, being
-younger than we, carry the turtle."
-
-Then the youngest frowned and said to them: "Fools! I am a great
-specialist in cotton."
-
-So the three brothers quarrelled, and arrogantly leaving the turtle
-behind them, they went to have the matter decided at Pinnacle, the
-capital of a king called Conqueror. When they came there, and had been
-announced and introduced by the door-keeper, they told their story to
-the king. And when the king had heard all, he said: "Stay here. I will
-examine you one after another." So they agreed and all stayed there.
-
-Then the king invited them in at his own dinner hour, seated them on
-magnificent seats, and set before them sweet dishes of six flavours,
-fit for a king. While all the rest ate, one of the Brahmans, the
-specialist in food, disgustedly shook his head and refused to eat. And
-when the king himself asked him why he would not eat food that was
-sweet and savoury, he respectfully replied: "Your Majesty, in this food
-there is the odour of smoke from a burning corpse. Therefore, I do not
-wish to eat it, however sweet it may be."
-
-Then at the king's command all the rest smelt of it and declared it the
-best of winter rice, and perfectly sweet. But the food-critic held his
-nose and would not touch it. Now when the king reflected and made a
-careful investigation, he learned from the commissioners that the dish
-was made of rice grown near a village crematory. Then he was greatly
-astonished and pleased, and said: "Brahman, you are certainly a judge
-of food. Pray take something else."
-
-After dinner the king dismissed them to their rooms, and sent for the
-most beautiful woman of his court. And at night he sent this lovely
-creature, all adorned, to the second brother, the specialist in women.
-She came with a servant of the king to his chamber, and when she
-entered, she seemed to illuminate the room. But the judge of women
-almost fainted, and stopping his nose with his left hand, he said to
-his servants: "Take her away! If not, I shall die. A goaty smell issues
-from her."
-
-So the servants, in distress and astonishment, conducted her to the
-king and told him what had happened. Then the king sent for the
-specialist in women, and said: "Brahman, she has anointed herself with
-sandal, camphor, and aloes, so that a delightful perfume pervades her
-neighbourhood. How could this woman have a goaty smell?" But in spite
-of this the specialist in women would not yield. And when the king
-endeavoured to learn the truth, he heard from her own lips that in her
-infancy she had been separated from her mother and had been brought up
-on goat's milk. Then the king was greatly astonished and loudly praised
-the critical judgment of the specialist in women.
-
-[Illustration: The brothers went to the ocean, and there they found a
-turtle.]
-
-Quickly he had a couch prepared for the third brother, the specialist
-in cotton. So the critic of cotton went to sleep on a bed with seven
-quilts over the frame and covered with a pure, soft coverlet. When only
-a half of the first watch of the night was gone, he suddenly started
-from the bed, shouting and writhing with pain, his hand pressed to his
-side. And the king's men who were stationed there saw the curly red
-outline of a hair deeply imprinted on his side.
-
-They went at once and informed the king, who said to them: "See whether
-there is anything under the quilts or not." So they went and searched
-under each quilt, and under the last they found one hair, which they
-immediately took and showed to the king. And the king summoned the
-specialist in cotton, and finding the mark exactly corresponding to
-the hair, was filled with extreme astonishment. And he spent that night
-wondering how the hair could sink into his body through seven quilts.
-
-Now when the king arose in the morning, he was delighted with their
-marvellous critical judgment and sensitiveness, so that he gave each
-of the three specialists a hundred thousand gold-pieces. And they were
-contented and stayed there, forgetting all about the turtle, and thus
-incurring a crime through the failure of their father's sacrifice.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When he had told this remarkable story, the goblin on the king's
-shoulder said: "O King, remember the curse I spoke of and declare which
-of these three was the cleverest."
-
-When he heard this, the wise king answered the goblin: "Without doubt
-I regard the specialist in cotton as the cleverest, on whose body the
-imprint of the hair was seen to appear visibly. The other two might
-possibly have found out beforehand."
-
-When the king had said this, the goblin slipped from his shoulder as
-before. And the king went back under the sissoo tree again to fetch
-him.
-
-
-
-
-NINTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Four Scientific Suitors. To which should the girl be given?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started. And the goblin spoke to him again: "O King, why
-do you go to such pains in this cemetery at night? Do you not see the
-home of the ghosts, full of dreadful creatures, terrible in the night,
-wrapped in darkness as in smoke? Why do you work so hard and grow weary
-for the sake of that monk? Well, to amuse the journey, listen to a
-puzzle which I will tell you."
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Avanti country is a city built by the gods at the beginning of
-time, adorned with wonderful wealth and opportunities for enjoyment.
-In the earliest age it was called Lotus City, then Pleasure City, then
-Golden City, and now it is called Ujjain. There lived a king named
-Heroic. And his queen was named Lotus.
-
-One day the king went with her to the sacred Ganges river and prayed
-to Shiva that he might have children. And after long prayer he heard a
-voice from heaven, for Shiva was at last pleased with his devotion: "O
-King, there shall be born to you a brave son to continue your dynasty,
-and a daughter more beautiful than the nymphs of heaven."
-
-When he heard the heavenly voice, the king was delighted at the
-fulfilment of his wishes, and went back to his city with the queen. And
-first Queen Lotus bore a son called Brave, and then a daughter named
-Grace who put the god of love to shame.
-
-When the girl grew up, the king sought for a suitable husband for her,
-and invited all the neighbouring princes by letter, but not one of them
-seemed good enough for her. So the king tenderly said to his daughter:
-"My dear, I do not see a husband worthy of you, so I will summon all
-the kings hither, and you shall choose." But the princess said: "My
-dear father, such a choice would be very embarrassing. I would rather
-not. Just marry me to any good-looking young man, who understands a
-single science from beginning to end. I wish nothing more nor less than
-that."
-
-[Illustration: "I understand the cries of all beasts and birds."]
-
-Now while the king was looking for such a husband, four brave,
-good-looking, scientific men from the south heard of the matter and
-came to him. And when they had been hospitably received, each explained
-his own science to the king.
-
-The first said: "I am a working-man, and my name is Five-cloth. I make
-five splendid suits of clothes a day. One I give to some god and one to
-a Brahman. One I wear myself, and one I shall give to my wife when I
-have one. The fifth I sell, to buy food and things. This is my science.
-Pray give me Grace."
-
-The second said: "I am a farmer, and my name is Linguist. I understand
-the cries of all beasts and birds. Pray give me the princess."
-
-The third said: "I am a strong-armed soldier, and my name is Swordsman.
-I have no rival on earth in the science of swordsmanship. O King, pray
-give me your daughter."
-
-The fourth said: "O King, I am a Brahman, and my name is Life. I
-possess a wonderful science. For if dead creatures are brought to me, I
-can quickly restore them to life. Let your daughter find a husband in a
-man who has such heroic skill."
-
-When they had spoken, and the king had seen that they all had wonderful
-garments and personal beauty, he and his daughter swung in doubt.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he said to the king: "Remember
-the curse I mentioned, and tell me to which of them the girl should be
-given."
-
-And the king said to the goblin: "Sir, you are merely trying to gain
-time by making me break silence. There is no puzzle about that. How
-could a warrior's daughter be given to a working-man, a weaver? Or to
-a farmer, either? And as to his knowledge of the speech of beasts and
-birds, of what practical use is it? And what good is a Brahman who
-neglects his own affairs and turns magician, despising real courage?
-Of course she should be given to the warrior Swordsman who had some
-manhood with his science."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he escaped by magic from the king's
-shoulder, and disappeared. And the king followed him as before.
-Discouragement never enters the brave heart of a resolute man.
-
-
-
-
-TENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Three Delicate Wives of King Virtue-banner. Which is the most
-delicate?_
-
-
-Then the king went to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder
-once more, and started toward the monk. And as he walked along, the
-goblin on his shoulder said: "O King, I will tell you a strange story
-to relieve your weariness. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There once was a king in Ujjain, whose name was Virtue-banner. He had
-three princesses as wives, and loved them dearly. One of them was named
-Crescent, the second Star, and the third Moon. While the king lived
-happily with his wives, he conquered all his enemies, and was content.
-
-One day at the time of the spring festival, the king went to the garden
-to play with his three wives. There he looked at the flower-laden
-vines with black rows of bees on them; they seemed like the bow of the
-god of love, all ready for service. He heard the songs of nightingales
-in the trees; they sounded like commands of Love. And with his wives he
-drank wine which seemed like Love's very life-blood.
-
-Then the king playfully pulled the hair of Queen Crescent, and a
-lotus-petal fell from her hair into her lap. And the queen was so
-delicate that it wounded her, and she screamed and fainted. And the
-king was distracted, but when servants sprinkled her with cool water
-and fanned her, she gradually recovered consciousness. And the king
-took her to the palace and waited upon his dear wife with a hundred
-remedies which the physicians brought.
-
-And when the king saw that she was made comfortable for the night, he
-went to the palace balcony with his second wife Star. Now while she
-slept on the king's breast, the moonbeams found their way through the
-window and fell upon her. And she awoke in a moment, and started up,
-crying "I am burned!" Then the king awoke and anxiously asked what the
-matter was, and he saw great blisters on her body. When he asked her
-about it, Queen Star said: "The moonbeams that fell on me did it."
-And the king was distracted when he saw how she wept and suffered. He
-called the servants and they made a couch of moist lotus-leaves, and
-dressed her wounds with damp sandal-paste.
-
-[Illustration: She gradually recovered consciousness.]
-
-At that moment the third queen, Moon, left her room to go to the king.
-And as she moved through the noiseless night, she clearly heard in a
-distant part of the palace the sound of pestles grinding grain. And she
-cried: "Oh, oh! It will kill me!" She wrung her hands and sat down in
-agony in the hall. But her servants returned and led her to her room,
-where she took to her bed and wept. And when the servants asked what
-the matter was, she tearfully showed her hands with bruises on them,
-like two lilies with black bees clinging to them. So they went and told
-the king. And he came in great distress, and asked his dear wife about
-it. She showed her hands and spoke, though she suffered: "My dear, when
-I heard the sound of the pestles, these bruises came." Then the king
-made them give her a cooling plaster of sandal-paste and other things.
-
-And the king thought: "One of them was wounded by a falling
-lotus-petal. The second was burned by the moonbeams. The third had her
-hands terribly bruised by the sound of pestles. I love them dearly,
-but alas! The very delicacy which is so great a virtue, is positively
-inconvenient."
-
-And he wandered about in the palace, and it seemed as if the night
-had three hundred hours. But in the morning the king and his skilful
-physicians took such measures that before long his wives were well and
-he was happy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When he had told this story, the goblin asked: "O King, which of them
-was the most delicate?" And the king said: "The one who was bruised by
-the mere sound of the pestles, when nothing touched her. The other two
-who were wounded or blistered by actual contact with lotus-petals or
-moonbeams, are not equal to her."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he went back, and the king resolutely
-hastened to catch him again.
-
-
-
-
-ELEVENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The King who won a Fairy as his Wife. Why did his counsellor's heart
-break?_
-
-
-Then the king went as before to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started back. And the goblin said once more: "O King, I
-like you wonderfully well because you are not discouraged. So I will
-tell you a delightful little story to relieve your weariness. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Anga country was a young king named Glory-banner, so beautiful
-that he seemed an incarnation of the god of love. He had conquered
-all his enemies by his strength of arm, and he had a counsellor named
-Farsight.
-
-At last the king, proud of his youth and beauty, entrusted all the
-power in his quiet kingdom to his counsellor, and gradually devoted
-himself entirely to pleasure. He spent all his time with the ladies of
-the court, and listened more attentively to their love-songs than to
-the advice of statesmen. He took greater pleasure in peeping into their
-windows than into the holes in his administration. But Farsight bore
-the whole burden of public business, and never wearied day or night.
-
-Then the people began to murmur: "The counsellor Farsight has seduced
-the king, and now he alone has all the kingly glory." And the
-counsellor said to his wife, whose name was Prudence: "My dear, the
-king is devoted to his pleasures, and great infamy is heaped upon me
-by the people. They say I have devoured the kingdom, though in fact I
-support the burden of it. Now popular gossip damages the greatest man.
-Was not Rama forced to abandon his good wife by popular clamour? So
-what shall I do now?"
-
-Then his clever wife Prudence showed that she deserved her name. She
-said: "My dear, leave the king and go on a pilgrimage. Tell him that
-you are an old man now, and should be permitted to travel in foreign
-countries for a time. Then the gossip will cease, when they see that
-you are unselfish. And when you are gone, the king will bear his own
-burdens. And thus his levity will gradually disappear. And when you
-come back, you can assume your office without reproach."
-
-To this advice the counsellor assented, and said to the king in the
-course of conversation: "Your Majesty, permit me to go on a pilgrimage
-for a few days. Virtue seems of supreme importance to me."
-
-But the king said: "No, no, counsellor. Is there no other kind of
-virtue except in pilgrimages? How about generosity and that kind of
-thing? Isn't it possible to prepare for heaven in your own house?"
-
-Then the counsellor said: "Your Majesty, one gets worldly prosperity
-from generosity and that kind of thing. But a pilgrimage gives eternal
-life. A prudent man should attend to it while he has strength. The
-chance may be lost, for no one can be sure of his health."
-
-But the king was still arguing against it when the door-keeper came in
-and said: "Your Majesty, the glorious sun is diving beneath the pool of
-heaven. Arise. The hour for your bath is slipping away." And the king
-went immediately to bathe.
-
-The counsellor went home, still determined on his pilgrimage. He would
-not let his wife go with him, but started secretly. Not even his
-servants knew.
-
-He wandered alone through many countries to many holy places, and
-finally came to the Odra country. There he saw a city near the ocean,
-where he entered a temple to Shiva and sat down in the court. There he
-sat, hot and dusty from long travel, when he was seen by a merchant
-named Treasure who had come to worship the god. The merchant gathered
-from his dress and appearance that he was a high-born Brahman, and
-invited him home, and entertained him with food, bathing, and the like.
-
-When the counsellor was rested, the merchant asked him: "Who are you?
-Whence do you come? And where are you going?" And the other replied: "I
-am a Brahman named Farsight. I came here on a pilgrimage from the Anga
-country."
-
-Then the merchant Treasure said to him: "I am preparing for a trading
-voyage to Golden Island. Do you stay in my house. And when I come
-back, and you are wearied from your pilgrimage, rest here for a time
-before going home." But Farsight said: "I do not want to stay here.
-I would rather go with you." And the good merchant agreed. And the
-counsellor slept in the first bed he had lain in for many nights.
-
-The next day he went to the seashore with the merchant, and entered the
-ship loaded with the merchant's goods. He sailed along, admiring the
-wonders and terrors of the sea, till at last he reached Golden Island.
-There he stayed for a time until the merchant had finished his buying
-and selling. Now on the way back, he saw a magic tree suddenly rising
-from the ocean. It had beautiful branches, boughs of gold, fruits of
-jewels, and splendid blossoms. And sitting on a jewelled couch in
-the branches was a lovely maiden of heavenly beauty. And while the
-counsellor wondered what it all meant, the maiden took her lute in her
-hand, and began to sing:
-
- Whatever seed of fate is sown,
- The fruit appears--'tis strange!
- Whatever deed a man has done,
- Not God himself can change.
-
-And when she had made her meaning clear, the heavenly maiden
-straightway sank with the magic tree and the couch. And Farsight
-thought: "What a wonderful thing I have seen to-day! What a strange
-place the ocean is for the appearance of a tree with a fairy in it! And
-if this is a usual occurrence at sea, why do not other goddesses arise?"
-
-The pilot and other sailors saw that he was astonished, and they said:
-"Sir, this wonderful maiden appears here regularly, and sinks a moment
-after, but the sight is new to you." Then the counsellor, filled with
-amazement, came to the shore with Treasure, and disembarked. And when
-the merchant had unloaded his goods and caused his servants to rejoice,
-the counsellor went home with him and spent many happy days there.
-
-At last he said to Treasure: "Merchant, I have rested happily for a
-long time in your house. Now I wish to go to my own country. Peace be
-with you!" And in spite of urging from the merchant, Farsight took his
-leave, and started with no companion except his own courage. He went
-through many countries and at last reached the Anga country. And
-scouts who had been sent by King Glory-banner saw him before he reached
-the city. When the king learned of it, he went himself out of the city
-to meet him, for he had been terribly grieved by the separation. He
-drew near, embraced and greeted the counsellor and took him, all worn
-and dusty with the weary journey, into an inner room.
-
-[Illustration: When he saw that she was saved, the king cried "Come,
-come to me!"]
-
-And as soon as the counsellor was refreshed, the king said:
-"Counsellor, why did you leave us? How could you bring yourself to do
-so harsh and loveless a thing? But after all, who can understand the
-strange workings of stern necessity? To think that you should decide
-all at once to wander off on a pilgrimage! Well, tell me what countries
-you visited, and what new things you saw."
-
-Then the counsellor told him the whole story truthfully and in order,
-the journey to Golden Island and the fairy who rose singing from the
-sea, her wonderful beauty and the magic tree.
-
-But the king immediately fell in love so hopelessly that his kingdom
-and his life seemed worthless to him without her. He took the
-counsellor aside and said: "Counsellor, I simply must see her. Remember
-that I shall die if I do not. I bow to my fate. I will take the journey
-which you took. You must not refuse me nor accompany me. I shall go
-alone and in disguise. You must rule the kingdom, and not dispute my
-words. Swear to do it on your life."
-
-So he spoke, and would not listen to advice, but dismissed the
-counsellor. Then Farsight was unhappy though a great festival was made
-for him. How can a good counsellor be happy when his master devotes
-himself to a vice?
-
-The next night King Glory-banner threw the burden of government on that
-excellent counsellor, assumed the dress of a hermit, and left his city.
-And as he travelled, he saw a monk named Grass, who said when the king
-bowed before him as a holy man: "My son, if you sail with a merchant
-named Fortune, you will obtain the maiden you desire. Go on fearlessly."
-
-So the king bowed again and went on rejoicing. After crossing rivers
-and mountains he came to the ocean. And on the shore he met at once
-the merchant Fortune whom the monk had mentioned, bound for Golden
-Island. And when the merchant saw the king's appearance and his signet
-ring, he bowed low, took him on the ship, and set sail.
-
-When the ship reached the middle of the sea, the maiden suddenly arose,
-sitting in the branches of the magic tree. And as the king gazed
-eagerly at her, she sang as before to her lute:
-
- Whatever seed of fate is sown,
- The fruit appears--'tis strange!
- Whatever deed a man has done,
- Not God himself can change.
-
- Whatever, how, for whom, and where
- 'Tis fated so to be,
- That thing, just so, for him, and there
- Must happen fatally.
-
-This song she sang, hinting at what was to happen. And the king gazed
-at her smitten by love, and could not move. Then he cried: "O Sea,
-in hiding her, you deceive those who think they have your treasures.
-Honour and glory to you! I seek your protection. Grant me my desire!"
-And as the king prayed, the maiden sank with the tree. Then the king
-jumped after her into the sea.
-
-The good merchant Fortune thought he was lost and was ready to die of
-grief. But he was comforted by a voice from heaven which said: "Do
-nothing rash. There is no danger when he sinks in the sea. For he is
-the king Glory-banner, disguised as a hermit. He came here for the sake
-of the maiden; she was his wife in a former life. And he will win her
-and return to his kingdom in the Anga country." So the merchant sailed
-on to complete his business.
-
-But King Glory-banner sank in the sea, and all at once he saw a
-heavenly city. He looked in amazement at the balconies with their
-splendid jewelled pillars, their walls bright with gold, and the
-network of pearls in their windows. And he saw gardens with pools
-that had stairways of various gems, and magic trees that yielded all
-desires. But rich as it was, the city was deserted.
-
-He entered house after house, but did not find the maiden anywhere.
-Then he climbed a high balcony built of gems, opened a door, and
-entered. And there he saw her all alone, lying on a jewelled couch, and
-clad in splendid garments. He eagerly raised her face to see if it was
-really she, and saw that it was indeed the maiden he sought. At the
-sight of her he had the strange feeling of the traveller in a desert in
-summer at the sight of a river.
-
-And she opened her eyes, saw that he was handsome and loveable, and
-left her couch in confusion. But she welcomed him and with downcast
-eyes that seemed like full-blown lotuses she did honour to his feet.
-Then she slowly spoke: "Who are you, sir? How did you come to this
-inaccessible under-world? And what is this hermit garb? For I see that
-you are a king. Oh, sir, if you would do me a kindness, tell me this."
-
-And the king answered her: "Beautiful maiden, I am King Glory-banner of
-the Anga country, and I heard from a reliable person that you were to
-be seen on the sea. To see you I assumed this garb, left my kingdom,
-and followed you hither. Oh, tell me who you are."
-
-Then she said to him with bashful love: "Sir, there is a king of the
-fairies named Moonshine. I am his daughter, and my name is Moonlight.
-Now my father has left me alone in this city. I do not know where he
-went with the rest of the people, or why. Therefore, as my home is
-lonely, I rise through the ocean, sit on a magic tree, and sing about
-fate."
-
-Then the king remembered the words of the monk, and urged her with such
-gentle, tender words that she confessed her love and agreed to marry
-him. But she made a condition: "My dear, on four set days in each month
-you must let me go somewhere unhindered and unseen. There is a reason."
-And the king agreed, married her, and lived in heavenly happiness with
-her.
-
-While he was living in heavenly bliss, Moonlight said to him one day:
-"My dear, you must wait here. I am going somewhere on an errand. For
-this is one of the set days. While you stay here, sweetheart, you must
-not go into that crystal room, nor plunge into this pool. If you do,
-you will find yourself at that very moment in the world again." So she
-said good-bye and left the city.
-
-But the king took his sword and followed, to learn her secret. And
-he saw a giant approaching with a great black cave of a mouth that
-yawned like the pit. The giant fell down and howled horribly, then took
-Moonlight into his mouth and swallowed her.
-
-And the king's anger blazed forth. He took his great sword, black as a
-snake that has sloughed its skin, ran up wrathfully, and cut off the
-giant's head. He was blinded by his madness, he did not know what to
-do, he was afflicted by the loss of his darling. But Moonlight split
-open the stomach of the giant, and came out alive and unhurt, like the
-brilliant, spotless moon coming out from a black cloud.
-
-When he saw that she was saved, the king cried: "Come, come to me!" and
-ran forward and embraced her. And he asked her: "What does it mean,
-dearest? Is this a dream, or an illusion?" And the fairy answered: "My
-dear, listen to me. It is not a dream, not an illusion. My father, the
-king of the fairies, laid this curse upon me. My father had many sons,
-but he loved me so that he could not eat without me. And I used to come
-to this deserted spot twice a month to worship Shiva.
-
-"One day I came here and it happened that I spent the whole day in
-worship. That day my father waited for me and would not eat or drink
-anything, though he was hungry and angry with me. At night I stood
-before him with downcast eyes, for I had done wrong. And he forgot
-his love and cursed me--so strong is fate. 'Because you have despised
-me and left me hungry a whole day, a giant named Terror-of-Fate will
-swallow you four times a month when you leave the city. And each time
-you will split him open and come out. And you shall not remember the
-curse afterwards, nor the pain of being swallowed alive. And you must
-live here alone.'
-
-"But when I begged him, he thought awhile and softened the curse. 'When
-Glory-banner, King of the Angas, shall become your husband, and shall
-see you swallowed by the giant, and shall kill the giant, then the
-curse shall end, and you shall remember all your magic arts.' Then he
-left me here, and went with his people to the Nishadha mountain. But
-I stayed here because of the curse. And now the curse is ended, and I
-remember everything. So now I shall go to the Nishadha mountain to see
-my father. Of course now I remember how to fly. And you are at liberty
-to stay here, or to go back to your own kingdom."
-
-Then the king was sad, and he begged her thus: "My beautiful wife, do
-not go for seven days. Be as kind as you are beautiful. Let me be happy
-with you in the garden, and forget my longings. Then you may go to your
-father, and I will go home." So he persuaded her, and was happy with
-her for six days in the garden. And the lilies in the ponds looked like
-longing eyes, and the ripples like hands raised to detain them, and the
-cries of swans and cranes seemed to say: "Do not leave us and go away."
-
-On the seventh day the king cleverly led his wife to the pool from
-which one could get back to the world. There he threw his arms about
-her and plunged into the pool, and came up with her in the pool in the
-garden of his own palace.
-
-The gardeners saw that the king had come back with a wife, and they
-joyfully ran and told the counsellor Farsight. He came and fell at the
-king's feet, and then led the king and the fairy into the palace. And
-the counsellor and the people thought: "Wonderful! The king has won the
-fairy whom others could see only for a moment like the lightning in
-the sky. Whatever is written in one's fate, that comes true, however
-impossible it may be."
-
-But when Moonlight saw that the king was in his own country, and
-the seven days were over, she thought she would fly away like other
-fairies. But she could not remember how. Then she became very sad, like
-a woman who has been robbed.
-
-And the king said: "Why are you so sad, my dear? Tell me." And the
-fairy said: "The curse is over. Yet because I have been bound so long
-in the fetters of your love, I have lost my magic arts. I cannot fly."
-Then the king thought: "The fairy is really mine," and he was happy and
-made a great feast.
-
-When the counsellor Farsight saw this, he went home, and lay down on
-his bed, and his heart broke, and he died. Then the king governed the
-kingdom himself, and lived for a long time in heavenly happiness with
-Moonlight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When he had told this story, the goblin said: "O King, when the king
-was so happy, why should the counsellor's heart break? Was it from
-grief because he did not win the fairy himself? Or from sorrow because
-the king came back, and he could no longer act as king? If you know and
-will not tell me, then you will lose your virtue, and your head will go
-flying into a hundred pieces."
-
-And the king said to the goblin: "O magic creature, neither of these
-reasons would be possible for a high-minded counsellor. But he thought:
-'The king used to neglect his duties for the sake of ordinary women.
-What will happen now, when he loves a fairy? In spite of all my
-efforts, a terrible misfortune has happened.' I think that was why his
-heart broke."
-
-Then the magic goblin went back to his tree in a moment. And the king
-was still determined to catch him, and went once more to the sissoo
-tree.
-
-
-
-
-TWELFTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Brahman who died because Poison from a Snake in the Claws of a
-Hawk fell into a Dish of Food given him by a Charitable Woman. Who is
-to blame for his death?_
-
-
-Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started as before. And as he walked along, the goblin
-said to him again: "O King, listen to a very condensed story."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Benares. In it lived a Brahman named Devaswami,
-whom the king honoured. He was very rich, and he had a son named
-Hariswami. This son had a wonderful wife, and her name was Beautiful.
-No doubt the Creator put together in her the priceless elements of
-charm and loveliness after his practice in making the nymphs of heaven.
-
-One night Hariswami was sleeping on a balcony cooled by the rays of the
-moon. And a fairy prince named Love-speed was flying through the air,
-and as he passed he saw Beautiful asleep beside her husband. He took
-her, still asleep, and carried her off through the air.
-
-Presently Hariswami awoke, and not seeing the mistress of his life, he
-rose in anxiety. And he wondered: "Oh, where has my wife gone? Is she
-angry with me? Or is she playing hide-and-seek with me, to see how I
-will take it?" So he roamed anxiously all over the balcony during the
-rest of the night. But he did not find her, though he searched as far
-as the garden.
-
-Then he was overcome by his sorrow and sobbed convulsively. "Oh,
-Beautiful, my darling! Fair as the moon! White as the moonlight!
-Was the night jealous of your beauty; did she carry you away? Your
-loveliness shamed the moon who refreshed me with beams cool as sandal;
-but now that you are gone, the same beams torment me like blazing
-coals, like poisoned arrows!"
-
-And as Hariswami lamented thus, the night came to an end, but his
-anguish did not end. The pleasant sun scattered the darkness, but could
-not scatter the blind darkness of Hariswami's madness. His pitiful
-lamentations increased a hundredfold, when the nightly cries of the
-birds ended. His relatives tried to comfort him, but he could not
-pluck up courage while his loved one was lost. He went here and there,
-sobbing out: "Here she stood. And here she bathed. And here she adorned
-herself. And here she played."
-
-His relatives and friends gave him good advice. "She is not dead," they
-said. "Why should you make way with yourself? You will surely find her.
-Pluck up courage and hunt for her. Nothing is impossible to the brave
-and determined man." And when they urged him, Hariswami after some days
-plucked up heart.
-
-He thought: "I will give all my fortune to the Brahmans, and then
-wander to holy places. Thus I will wear away my sins, and when my sins
-are gone, perhaps I shall find my darling in my wanderings." So he
-arose and bathed.
-
-On the next day he provided food and drink, and made a great feast
-for the Brahmans, and gave them all he had except his piety. Then he
-started to wander to holy places, hoping to find his wife.
-
-As he wandered, the summer came on him like a lion, the blazing sun its
-mouth, and the sunbeams its mane. And the hot wind blew, made hotter
-yet by the sighs of travellers separated from their wives. And the
-yellow mud dried and cracked, as if the lakes were broken-hearted at
-the loss of their lotuses. And the trees, filled with chirping birds,
-seemed to lament the absence of the spring, and their withering leaves
-seemed like lips that grow dry in the heat.
-
-At this time Hariswami was distressed by the heat and the loss of his
-wife, by hunger, thirst, and weariness. And as he sought for food,
-he came to a village. There he saw many Brahmans eating in the house
-of a Brahman named Lotus-belly, and he leaned against the doorpost,
-speechless and motionless.
-
-Then the good wife of that pious Brahman pitied him, and she thought:
-"Hunger is a heavy burden. It makes anyone light. Look at this hungry
-man standing with bowed head at the door. He looks like a pious man
-who has come from a far country, and he is tired. Therefore he is a
-proper person for me to feed."
-
-[Illustration: The summer came on him like a lion.]
-
-So the good woman took in her hands a dish filled with excellent rice,
-melted butter, and candied sugar, and courteously gave it to him. And
-she said: "Go to the edge of our pond, and eat it."
-
-He thanked her, took the dish, went a little way, and set it down under
-a fig-tree on the edge of the pond. Then he washed his hands and feet
-in the pond, rinsed his mouth, and joyfully drew near to eat the good
-food.
-
-At that moment a hawk settled on the tree, carrying a black snake in
-his beak and claws. And the snake died in the grasp of the hawk, and
-his mouth opened, and a stream of poison came out. This poison fell
-into the dish of food.
-
-But Hariswami did not see it. He came up hungry, and ate it all. And
-immediately he felt the terrible effects of the poison. He stammered
-out: "Oh, when fate goes wrong, everything goes wrong. Even this rice
-and the milk and the melted butter and the candied sugar is poison
-to me." And he staggered up to the Brahman's wife and said: "Oh,
-Brahman's wife, I have been poisoned by the food you gave me. Bring a
-poison-doctor at once. Otherwise you will be the murderer of a Brahman."
-
-And the good woman was terribly agitated. But while she was running
-about to find a poison-doctor, Hariswami turned up his eyes and died.
-Thus, though she was not to blame, though she was really charitable,
-the poor wife was reproached by the angry Brahman who thought she had
-murdered her guest. She was falsely accused for a really good action.
-So she was dejected and went on a pilgrimage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When he had told this story, the goblin said: "O King, who murdered the
-Brahman? the snake, or the hawk, or the woman who gave him the food, or
-her husband? This was discussed in the presence of the god of death,
-but they could not decide. Therefore, O King, do you say. Who killed
-the Brahman? Remember the curse, if you know and do not tell the truth."
-
-Then the king broke silence and said: "Who did the murder? The snake
-cannot be blamed, because he was being eaten by his enemy and could not
-help himself. The hawk was hungry and saw nothing. He was not to blame.
-And how can you blame either or both of the charitable people who gave
-food to a guest who arrived unexpectedly? They were quite virtuous, and
-cannot be blamed. I should say that the dead man himself was to blame,
-for he dared to accuse one of the others."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he jumped from the king's shoulder
-and escaped to the sissoo tree. And the king ran after him again,
-determined to catch him.
-
-
-
-
-THIRTEENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Girl who showed Great Devotion to the Thief. Did he weep or laugh?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started. And as he walked along, the goblin said to him:
-"O King, I will tell you another story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Ayodhya, which was once the capital of Rama the
-exterminator of giants. In this city lived a strong-armed king named
-Hero-banner who protected the world as a wall protects a city. During
-his reign a great merchant named Jewel lived in the city. His wife was
-named Pleasing, and a daughter named Pearl was given to her prayers.
-
-As the girl grew up in her father's house, her natural virtues grew
-too: beauty, charm, and modesty. And thus she became a young woman.
-Now in her young womanhood she was asked in marriage not only by great
-merchants, but even by kings. But she was prudent and did not like men.
-She would not have loved a god if he had been her husband. She was
-ready to die at merely hearing talk of her marriage. So her father was
-silent on the subject, though his tender love for her made him sad. And
-the story was known everywhere in Ayodhya.
-
-At this time all the citizens were being plundered by thieves, and they
-petitioned King Hero-banner in these words: "O King, we are plundered
-every night by thieves, and cannot catch them. Your Majesty must decide
-what to do." So the king stationed night-watchmen in hiding about the
-city, to search out the thieves.
-
-When the watchmen failed to catch the thieves for all their searching,
-the king himself took his sword, and wandered about alone at night. And
-he saw a man creeping along a wall with noiseless steps, often casting
-a fearful glance behind him. The king concluded that this was the thief
-who all alone robbed the city, and went up to him. And the thief asked
-him who he was. The king replied: "I am a thief."
-
-Then the thief said joyfully: "Good! You are my friend. Come to my
-house. I will treat you like a friend." So the king agreed and went
-with the thief to a house hidden in a grove and guarded by a wall, full
-of delightful and beautiful things, and bright with shining gems. There
-the thief offered the king a seat, and went into an inner room.
-
-At that moment a serving-maid came into the room and said to the king:
-"Your Majesty, why have you come into the jaws of death? This wonderful
-thief has gone out, intending to do you a mischief. He is certainly
-treacherous. Go away quickly."
-
-So the king quickly went away, returned to the city, and drew up a
-company of soldiers. With these soldiers he went and surrounded the
-house where the serving-maid had been.
-
-When the thief saw that the house was surrounded, he knew that he was
-betrayed, and came out to fight and die like a man. He showed more than
-human valour. He cut off the trunks of elephants, the legs of horses,
-and the heads of men; and he was all alone, with only his sword and
-shield. When the king saw that his army was destroyed, he ran forward
-himself.
-
-The king was a scientific swordsman, so with a turn of his wrist he
-sent the sword and the dagger flying from the thief's hand. Then he
-threw away his own sword, wrestled with the thief, threw him, and took
-him alive.
-
-The next morning the thief was led to the place of execution to be
-impaled, and the drums were beaten. And Pearl, the merchant's daughter,
-saw him from her balcony. All bloody and dusty as he was, she went mad
-with love, found her father, and said to him: "Father, I am going to
-marry that thief who is being led to execution. You must save him from
-the king. Otherwise I shall die with him."
-
-But her father said: "What do you mean, my daughter? That thief stole
-everything the citizens had, and the king's men are going to kill
-him. How can I save him from the king? Besides, what nonsense are you
-talking?" But the more he scolded, the more determined she became. And
-as he loved his daughter, he went to the king and offered all he had
-for the release of the thief.
-
-[Illustration: With a turn of the wrist he sent the dagger flying from
-the chief's hand.]
-
-But the king would not be tempted by millions. He would not release the
-thief who stole everything, whom he had captured at the risk of his
-life. So the father returned home sadly. And the girl, not heeding the
-arguments of her relatives, took a bath, entered a litter, and went
-to the death-scene of the rogue, to die with him. Her parents and her
-relatives followed her, weeping.
-
-At that moment the executioners impaled the thief. As his life ebbed
-away, he saw the girl and the people with her, and learned her story.
-Then the tears rolled down his cheeks, but he died with a smile on his
-lips.
-
-The faithful girl took the thief's body from the stake, and mounted the
-pyre to burn herself. But the blessed god Shiva was staying invisibly
-in the cemetery, and at that moment he spoke from the sky: "O faithful
-wife, I am pleased with your constancy to the husband of your choice.
-Choose whatever boon you will from me."
-
-The girl worshipped the gracious god and chose her boon: "O blessed
-one, my father has no son. May he have a hundred. Otherwise his
-childless life would end when I am gone."
-
-And the god spoke again from the sky: "O faithful wife, your father
-shall have a hundred sons. But choose another boon. A woman faithful as
-you are deserves more than the little thing you asked."
-
-Then she said: "O god, if I have won your favour, may this my husband
-live and always be a good man."
-
-The invisible Shiva spoke from the sky: "So be it. Your husband shall
-be made alive and well. He shall be a good man, and King Hero-banner
-shall be pleased with him."
-
-Then the thief arose at once, alive and well. And the merchant Jewel
-was overjoyed and astonished. He took Pearl and the thief, his
-son-in-law, went home with his rejoicing relatives, and made a feast
-great as his own delight, in honour of the sons he was to have.
-
-And the king was pleased when he learned the story, and in recognition
-of the stupendous courage of the thief, he appointed him general at
-once. The thief reformed, married the merchant's daughter, and lived
-happily with her, devoted to virtue.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he reminded the king of the
-curse, and said: "O king, when the thief on the stake saw the
-merchant's daughter approaching with her father, did he weep or laugh?
-Tell me."
-
-And the king answered: "He thought: 'I can make no return to this
-merchant for his unselfish friendship.' Therefore he wept from grief.
-And he also thought: 'Why does this girl reject kings and fall in love
-with a thief like me? How strange women are!' Therefore he laughed from
-astonishment."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he immediately slipped from the king's
-shoulder and escaped to his home. But the king was not discouraged. He
-followed him to the sissoo tree.
-
-
-
-
-FOURTEENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Man who changed into a Woman at Will. Was his wife his or the
-other man's?_
-
-
-So the king went back as before under the sissoo tree, put the goblin
-on his shoulder, and started toward the monk. And as he walked along,
-the goblin told the king a story.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was a city called Shivapur in Nepal. Long ago a king named
-Glory-banner lived there, and he deserved the name. He laid the burden
-of government on his counsellor named Ocean-of-Wisdom, and devoted
-himself to a life of pleasure with his wife Moonbright.
-
-In course of time a daughter named Moonlight was born to them, pleasing
-as the moonlight to the eyes of men. When she grew up, she went one day
-in spring with her servants to a festival in the garden.
-
-There she was seen by a Brahman youth named Master-mind, the son of
-Rich, who had come there to the festival. When he saw her plucking
-flowers with one arm uplifted, he went mad with love. His heart was
-taken captive by the gay maiden, and he was no longer master of his
-mind.
-
-He thought: "Is she the goddess of love, plucking the spring flowers
-in person? Or is she a forest goddess, come here to worship the
-spring-time?"
-
-Then the princess saw him, like a new god of love incarnate. The moment
-her eyes fell on him, she fell in love, forgetting her flowers and
-even her own limbs. While they looked at each other, lost in love like
-people in a picture, a great wail of anguish arose. They lifted their
-heads to learn what the matter was, and just then an elephant that had
-broken his chain, maddened by the scent of another mad elephant, came
-by, crushing the people in his path. He had thrown off his driver and
-the ankus hung from him as he ran. And everyone fled in terror.
-
-But the youth Master-mind ran up in a hurry and took the princess in
-his arms. And with a mixture of fear and love and modesty she half
-embraced him as he carried her far out of the elephant's path. Then her
-people gradually gathered, and she went to the palace, looking at the
-youth, and burning over the flame of love.
-
-[Illustration: An elephant came by, crushing the people in his path.]
-
-And the youth went home from the garden, and thought: "I cannot live,
-I cannot exist a moment without her. I must seek help from my teacher
-Root, who is a thorough rogue." And so the day slowly passed.
-
-The next morning he went to his teacher Root, and found him with his
-constant friend Moon. He drew near, bowed, and told his desire. And the
-teacher laughed and promised to help him.
-
-So that wonderful rogue put a magic pill in his mouth, and thus changed
-himself into an old Brahman. He put a second pill into Master-mind's
-mouth, which changed him into a lovely girl. Then that prince of rogues
-took him to the king and said: "O King, this maiden has come a long
-distance to marry my only son. But my son has gone away, and I am going
-to look for him. Please keep the girl. For you are a protector to be
-trusted while I am looking for my son."
-
-The king was afraid of a curse, so he promised to do it. And summoning
-his daughter, he said: "Daughter, keep this maiden in your chamber, and
-let her live with you." So the girl took the Brahman youth Master-mind
-in his girl form to her own apartments.
-
-When Root had gone away, Master-mind in his girl form lived with his
-belovèd, and in a few days came to know her in an intimate and loving
-way, as girl friends do. Then when he saw that she was pining away and
-tossing on her couch, he asked the princess one evening: "My dear girl,
-why do you grow pale and thin day by day, grieving as if separated from
-your love? Tell me. Why not trust a loving, innocent girl like me? If
-you will not tell me, I shall starve myself."
-
-And the princess trusted him and said after a little hesitation: "My
-dear girl, why should I not trust you? Listen. I will tell you. One day
-I went to the spring festival in the garden. There I saw a handsome
-Brahman youth, fair as the moon but not so cold, the sight of whom
-kindled my love. For he adorned the garden as the spring-time does.
-While my eager eyes were feasting on his face, a great mad elephant
-that had broken his chain came charging and thundering past like a
-black cloud in the dry season. My servants scattered in terror, and I
-was helpless. But the Brahman youth took me in his arms and carried me
-far away. I seemed to be in a sandal bath, in a stream of nectar. I
-cannot tell how I felt as I touched him. Presently my servants gathered
-around, and I was brought here helpless. I felt as if I had fallen from
-heaven to earth. From that day I see in my thoughts my dear preserver
-beside me. I embrace him in my dreams. What need of more words? I wear
-away the time, thinking constantly of him and only him. The fire of
-separation from the lord of my life devours me day and night."
-
-When Master-mind heard these welcome words, he rejoiced and counted
-himself happy. And thinking the time to reveal himself had come, he
-took the pill from his mouth, and disclosed his natural form. And he
-said: "Beautiful maiden, I am he whom you bought and enslaved with a
-kindly glance in the garden. I was sick at the separation from you;
-so I took the form of a girl, and came here. So now bring heaven in a
-loving glance to my love-tortured heart."
-
-When the princess saw that the lord of her life was beside her, she was
-torn between love and wonder and modesty, and did not know what she
-ought to do. So they were secretly married and lived there in supreme
-happiness. Master-mind lived in a double form. By day he was a girl
-with the pill in his mouth, by night a man without the pill.
-
-After a time the brother-in-law of King Glory-banner gave his
-daughter with great pomp to a Brahman, the son of the counsellor
-Ocean-of-Wisdom. And the princess Moonlight was invited to her cousin's
-wedding and went to her uncle's house. And Master-mind went with her in
-his girl form.
-
-When the counsellor's son saw Master-mind in his lovely girl form, he
-was terribly smitten with the arrows of love. His heart was stolen by
-the sham girl, and he went home feeling lonely even with his wife. It
-made him crazy to think of that lovely face. When his father tried to
-soothe him, he woke from his madness and stammered out his insane
-desire. And his father was terribly distressed, knowing that all this
-depended on another.
-
-Then the king learned the story and came there. When the king saw his
-condition and perceived that he was seven parts gone in love, he said:
-"How can I give him the girl who was intrusted to me by the Brahman?
-Yet without her he will be ten parts gone in love, and will die. And
-if he dies, then his father, the counsellor, will die too. And if the
-counsellor perishes, my kingdom will perish. What shall I do?"
-
-He consulted his counsellors, and they said: "Your Majesty, the first
-duty of a king is the preservation of the virtue of his people.
-This is the fundamental principle, and is established as such among
-counsellors. If the counsellor is lost, the fundamental principle is
-lost; how then can virtue be preserved? So in this case it would be
-sinful to destroy the counsellor through his son. You must by all means
-avoid the loss of virtue which would ensue. Give the Brahman's girl to
-the counsellor's son. And when the Brahman returns, further measures
-will suggest themselves."
-
-To this the king agreed, and promised to give the sham girl to the
-counsellor's son. So Master-mind in his girl form was brought from
-the chamber of the princess, and he said to the king: "Your Majesty,
-I was brought here by somebody for a given purpose. If you give me to
-somebody else, well and good. You are the king. Right and wrong depend
-on you. I will marry him to-day, but only on one condition. My husband
-shall go away immediately after the marriage and not return until he
-has been on a pilgrimage for six months. Otherwise I shall bite out my
-tongue."
-
-So the counsellor's son was summoned, and he joyfully assented. He
-made the man his wife at once, put the sham wife in a guarded room and
-started on a pilgrimage. So Master-mind lived there in his woman form.
-
-When he realized that the counsellor's son would soon return,
-Master-mind fled by night. And Root heard the story, and again
-assumed the form of an old Brahman. He took his friend Moon, went to
-Glory-banner, and said respectfully: "Your Majesty, I have brought my
-son. Pray give me my daughter-in-law."
-
-The king was afraid of a curse, so he said: "Brahman, I do not know
-where your daughter-in-law has gone. Be merciful. To atone for my
-carelessness, I will give your son my own daughter."
-
-The prince of rogues in the form of an old Brahman angrily refused.
-But the king finally persuaded him, and with all due form married his
-daughter Moonlight to Moon, who pretended to be the old Brahman's son.
-Then Root went home with the bride and bridegroom.
-
-But then Master-mind came, and in the presence of Root a great dispute
-arose between him and Moon.
-
-Master-mind said: "Moonlight should be given to me. I married the girl
-first with my teacher's permission."
-
-Moon said: "Fool! What rights have you in my wife? Her father gave her
-to me in regular marriage."
-
-So they disputed about the princess whom one had won by fraud and the
-other by force. But they could reach no decision.
-
- * * * * *
-
-O King, tell me. Whose wife is she? Resolve my doubts, and remember
-the agreement about your head.
-
-Then the king said: "I think she is the rightful wife of Moon. For she
-was married to him in the regular way by her father in the presence of
-her relatives. Master-mind married her secretly, like a thief. And when
-a thief takes things from other people, it is never right."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he went back home as before. And the
-king stuck to his purpose. He went back again, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started from the sissoo tree.
-
-
-
-
-FIFTEENTH GOBLIN
-
- _The Fairy Prince Cloud-chariot and the Serpent Shell-crest. Which is
- the more self-sacrificing?_
-
-
-So the king walked along with the goblin. And the goblin said: "O king,
-listen to a story the like of which was never heard."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a mountain called Himalaya where all gems are found. It is the
-king of mountains. Its proud loftiness is everywhere the theme of song.
-The sun himself has not seen its top.
-
-On its summit is a city called Golden City, brilliant like a heap of
-sunbeams left in trust by the sun. There lived a glorious fairy-king
-named Cloud-banner. In the garden of his palace was a wishing-tree
-which had come down to him from his ancestors.
-
-King Cloud-banner had worshipped the tree which was really a god,
-and by its grace had obtained a son named Cloud-chariot. This son
-remembered his former lives. He was destined to be a Buddha in a future
-life. He was generous, noble, merciful to all creatures, and obedient
-to his parents.
-
-When he grew up, the king anointed him crown prince, persuaded thereto
-by his counsellors as well as by the remarkable virtues of the youth.
-While Cloud-chariot was crown prince, his father's counsellors came to
-him one day and kindly said: "Crown prince, you must always honour this
-wishing-tree in your garden; for it yields all desires, and cannot be
-taken away by anybody. As long as it is favourably disposed to us, the
-king of the gods could not conquer us, and of course nobody else could."
-
-Then Cloud-chariot thought: "Alas! The men of old had this heavenly
-tree, yet they did not pluck from it any worthy fruit. They were
-mean-spirited. They simply begged it for some kind of wealth. And so
-they degraded themselves and the great tree too. But I will get from it
-the wish which is in my heart."
-
-With this thought the noble creature went to his father. He showed
-such complete deference as to delight his father, then when his father
-was comfortably seated, he whispered: "Father, you know yourself that
-in this sea of life all possessions, including our own bodies, are
-uncertain as a rippling wave. Especially is money fleeting, uncertain,
-fickle as the twilight lightning. The only thing in life which does
-not perish is service. This gives birth to virtue and glory, twin
-witnesses through all the ages to come. Father! Why do we keep such a
-wishing-tree for the sake of transient blessings? Our ancestors clung
-to it, saying: 'It is mine, it is mine.' And where are they now? What
-is it to them, or they to it? Then, if you bid me, I will beg this
-generous wishing-tree for the one fruit that counts, the fruit of
-service to others."
-
-His father graciously assented, and Cloud-chariot went to the
-wishing-tree, and said: "O god, you have fulfilled the wishes of our
-fathers. Fulfil now my one single wish. Remove poverty from the world.
-A blessing be with you. Go. I give you to the needy world." And as
-Cloud-chariot bowed reverently, there came a voice from the tree: "I
-go, since you give me up." And the wishing-tree immediately flew from
-heaven and rained so much money on the earth that nobody was poor. And
-Cloud-chariot's reputation for universal benevolence was spread abroad.
-
-But all the relatives were jealous and envious. They thought that
-they could easily conquer Cloud-chariot and his father without the
-wishing-tree, and they prepared to fight to take away his kingdom.
-But Cloud-chariot said to his father: "Father, how can you take your
-weapons and fight? What high-minded man would want a kingdom after
-killing his relatives just for the sake of this wretched, perishable
-body? Let us abandon the kingdom, and go away somewhere to devote
-ourselves entirely to virtue. Then we shall be blessed in both worlds.
-And let these wretched relatives enjoy the kingdom which they hanker
-after."
-
-And Cloud-banner said: "My son, I only want the kingdom for you, and if
-you give it up from benevolent motives, what good is it to me? I am an
-old man."
-
-So Cloud-chariot left the kingdom and went with his father and mother
-to the Malabar hills. There he built a hermit's retreat, and waited on
-his parents.
-
-One day, as he wandered about, he met Friend-wealth, the son of
-All-wealth, who lived there as king of the Siddhas. And Cloud-chariot
-spoke to him and made friends with him.
-
-Then one day Cloud-chariot saw a shrine to the goddess Gauri in
-the grove, and entered there. And he saw a slender, lovely maiden
-surrounded by her girl friends and playing on a lute, in honour
-of Gauri. The deer listened to her music and her song, motionless
-as if ashamed because her eyes were lovelier than their own. When
-Cloud-chariot saw the slender maiden, his heart was ravished.
-
-And he seemed to her to make the garden beautiful like the spring-time.
-A strange longing came over her. She became so helpless that her
-friends were alarmed.
-
-Then Cloud-chariot asked one of her friends: "My good girl, what is
-your friend's sweet name? What family does she adorn?"
-
-And the friend said: "This is Sandal, sister of Friend-wealth, and
-daughter of the king of the Siddhas." Then she earnestly asked for the
-name and family of Cloud-chariot from a hermit's son who had come with
-him. And then she spoke to Sandal with words punctuated by smiles: "My
-dear, why do you not show hospitality to the fairy prince? He is a
-guest whom all the world would be glad to honour."
-
-But the bashful princess remained silent with downcast eyes. Then the
-friend said: "She is bashful. Accept a hospitable greeting from me."
-And she gave him a garland.
-
-Cloud-chariot, far gone in love, took the garland and put it around
-Sandal's neck. And the loving, sidelong glance which she gave him
-seemed like another garland of blue lotuses. So they pledged themselves
-without speaking a word.
-
-Then a serving-maid came and said to the princess: "Princess, your
-mother remembers you. Come at once." And she went slowly, after drawing
-from her lover's face a passionate glance, for which Love's arrow had
-wedged a path. And Cloud-chariot went to the hermitage, thinking of
-her; while she, sick with the separation from the lord of her life,
-saw her mother, then tottered to her bed and fell upon it. Her eyes
-were blinded as if by smoke from the fire of love within her, her limbs
-tossed in fever, she shed tears. And though her friends anointed her
-with sandal and fanned her with lotus-leaves, she found no rest on her
-bed or in the lap of a friend or on the ground.
-
-Then when the day fled away with the passionate red twilight, and the
-moon drew near to kiss the face of the laughing East, she despaired of
-life, and her modesty would not let her send a message in spite of all
-her love. But somehow she lived through the night. And Cloud-chariot
-too was in anguish at the separation. Even in his bed he was fallen
-into the hand of Love. Though his passion was so recent, he had already
-grown pale. Though shame kept him silent, his looks told of the pangs
-of love. And so he passed the night.
-
-In the morning he arose and went to the shrine of Gauri. And his
-friend, the hermit's son, followed him and tried to comfort him. At
-that moment the lovelorn Sandal came out of her house alone, for she
-could not endure the separation, and crept to that lonely spot to end
-her life there.
-
-She did not see her lover behind a tree, and with eyes brimming with
-tears she prayed to the goddess Gauri: "O goddess, since I could not in
-this life have Cloud-chariot as my husband, grant that in another life
-at last he may be my husband."
-
-Then she tied her garment to the limb of an ashoka tree before the
-goddess and cried: "Alas, my lord! Alas, Cloud-chariot! They say your
-benevolence is universal. Why did you not save me?"
-
-But as she fastened the garment about her neck, a voice from the sky
-was heard in the air: "My daughter, do nothing rash. Cloud-chariot, the
-future king of the fairies, shall be your husband."
-
-And Cloud-chariot heard the heavenly voice, and with his friend
-approached his rejoicing sweetheart. The friend said to the girl: "Here
-is the gift which the goddess grants you." And Cloud-chariot spoke more
-than one tender word and loosed the garment from her neck with his own
-hand.
-
-Then a girl friend who had been gathering flowers there and had
-seen what was happening, came up joyfully and said, while Sandal's
-modest eyes seemed to be tracing a figure on the ground: "My dear,
-I congratulate you. Your wish is granted. This very day Prince
-Friend-wealth said in my presence to King All-wealth, your father:
-'Father, the fairy prince Cloud-chariot, who deserves honour from all
-the world, who gave away the wishing-tree, is here, and we should treat
-him as an honoured guest. We could not find another bridegroom like
-him. So let us welcome him with the gift of Sandal who is a pearl of
-a girl.' And the king agreed, and your brother Friend-wealth has this
-moment gone to the hermitage of the noble prince. I think your marriage
-will soon take place. So go to your chamber, and let the noble prince
-go to his hermitage."
-
-So she went slowly and happily and lovingly. And Cloud-chariot hastened
-to the hermitage. There he greeted Friend-wealth and heard his message,
-and told him about his own birth and former life. Then Friend-wealth
-was delighted and told Cloud-chariot's parents who were also delighted.
-Then he went home and made his own parents happy with the news.
-
-That very day he invited Cloud-chariot to his home. And they made a
-great feast as was proper, and married the fairy prince and Sandal on
-the spot. Then Cloud-chariot was completely happy and spent some time
-there with his bride Sandal.
-
-One day he took a walk for pleasure about the hills with Friend-wealth,
-and came to the seashore. There he saw great heaps of bones, and he
-asked Friend-wealth: "What creatures did these heaps of bones belong
-to?" His brother-in-law Friend-wealth said to the merciful prince:
-"Listen, my friend. I will tell you the story briefly."
-
-Long ago Kadru, the mother of the serpents, made a wager with her
-rival Vinata, the mother of the great bird Garuda. She won the wager
-and enslaved her rival. Now Garuda's anger continued even after he had
-freed his mother from slavery. He kept going into the underworld where
-Kadru's offspring, the serpents, live, to eat them. Some he killed,
-others he crushed.
-
-Then Vasuki, king of the serpents, feared that in time all would be
-lost if the serpents were all to be slain thus. So he made an agreement
-with Garuda. He said: "O king of birds, I will send one serpent every
-day to the shore of the southern sea for you to eat. But you are never
-to enter the underworld again. What advantage would it be to you if all
-the serpents were slain at once?" And Garuda agreed, with an eye to his
-own advantage.
-
-Since that time Garuda every day eats the snake sent by Vasuki here on
-the seashore. And these heaps of bones from the serpents that have been
-eaten, have in time formed a regular mountain.
-
-When Cloud-chariot heard this story from the lips of Friend-wealth, he
-was deeply grieved and said: "My friend, wretched indeed is that king
-Vasuki who deliberately sacrifices his own subjects to their enemy. He
-is a coward. He has a thousand heads, yet could not find a single mouth
-to say: 'O Garuda, eat me first.' How could he be so mean as to beg
-Garuda to destroy his own race? Or how can Garuda, the heavenly bird,
-do such a crime? Oh, insolent madness!"
-
-So the noble Cloud-chariot made up his mind that he would use his poor
-body that day to save the life of one serpent at least. At that moment
-a door-keeper, sent by Friend-wealth's father, came to summon them
-home. And Cloud-chariot said: "Do you go first. I will follow." So he
-dismissed Friend-wealth, and remained there himself.
-
-As he walked about waiting for the thing he hoped for, he heard a
-pitiful sound of weeping at a distance. He went a little way and saw
-near a lofty rock a sorrowful, handsome youth. He was at that moment
-abandoned by a creature that seemed to be a policeman, and was gently
-persuading his old, weeping mother to return. And Cloud-chariot wished
-to know who it might be. So he hid himself and listened, his heart
-melting with pity.
-
-The old mother was bowed down by anguish, and started to lament over
-the youth. "Oh, Shell-crest! Oh, my virtuous son, whom I fondled, not
-counting the labour and the pain! Oh, my son, my only son! Where shall
-I see you again? Oh, my darling! When your bright face is gone, your
-old father will fall into black despair. How can he live then? Your
-tender form is hurt by the rays of the sun. How can it bear the pangs
-of being eaten by Garuda? Oh, my unhappy fate! Why did the Creator and
-the serpent-king choose my only son from the broad serpent-world, and
-seize upon him?"
-
-And as she lamented, the youth, her son, said: "Mother, I am unhappy
-enough. Why torture me yet more? Return home. For the last time I bow
-before you. It is time for Garuda to come."
-
-And the mother cried: "Alas, alas for me! Who will save my son?" And
-she gazed about wildly and wept aloud.
-
-All this Cloud-chariot, the future Buddha, saw and heard. And with deep
-pity he thought: "Alas! This is a serpent named Shell-crest, sent here
-by Vasuki for Garuda to eat. And this is his mother, following him out
-of her great love. He is her only son, and she is mourning in pain and
-bitter anguish. I should forever curse my useless life if I did not
-save one in such agony at the cost of a body which must perish anyway
-some day."
-
-So Cloud-chariot joyfully approached and said to the old mother:
-"Serpent-mother, I will save your son. Do not weep."
-
-But the old mother thought that this was Garuda, and she screamed: "O
-Garuda, eat me! Eat me!"
-
-Then Shell-crest said: "Mother, this is not Garuda. Do not be alarmed.
-What a difference between one who soothes our feelings like the moon,
-and the fearful Garuda!"
-
-And Cloud-chariot said: "Mother, I am a fairy, come to save your son.
-I will put on his garment and offer my own body to the hungry bird. Do
-you take your son and go home."
-
-But the old mother said: "No, no. You are more than a son to me. To
-think that such as you should feel pity for such as we!"
-
-And Cloud-chariot answered: "Mother, I beg you not to disappoint
-me." But when he insisted, Shell-crest said: "Noble being, you have
-certainly shown compassion, but I do not wish to save my body at the
-expense of yours. Who would save a common stone at the cost of a pearl?
-The world is full of creatures like me, who are merciful only to
-themselves. But creatures like you, who are merciful to all the world,
-are very rare. Oh, pious being, I could not stain the pure family of
-Shell-guard, as the dark spot stains the disk of the moon."
-
-[Illustration: He climbed the rock of sacrifice, eager to give his life
-for another.]
-
-Then Shell-crest said to his mother: "Mother, return from this desolate
-place. Do you not see the rock of sacrifice wet with the blood of
-serpents, the terrible plaything of Death? I will go for a moment to
-the shore and worship the god Shiva there. And I will return quickly
-before Garuda comes."
-
-So Shell-crest took leave of his mother and went to worship Shiva.
-And Cloud-chariot thought: "If Garuda should come in this interval, I
-should be happy."
-
-Then he saw the trees stiffening themselves against the wind made
-by the sweeping wings of the king of birds. "Garuda is coming," he
-thought, and climbed the rock of sacrifice, eager to give his life for
-another.
-
-And Garuda straightway pounced upon the noble creature and lifted
-him from the rock in his beak. While Cloud-chariot's blood flowed in
-streams and the gem fell from his forehead, Garuda carried him off and
-began to eat him on the summit of the Malabar hills. And while he
-was being eaten, Cloud-chariot thought: "In every future life of mine
-may my body do some good to somebody. I would not attain heaven and
-salvation without doing some good first." Then a shower of flowers fell
-from heaven on the fairy prince.
-
-At that moment the blood-stained gem from his forehead fell in front
-of his wife Sandal. She was in anguish at the sight, and as her
-parents-in-law were near, she tearfully showed it to them. And they
-were alarmed at the sight of their son's gem and wondered what it
-meant. Then King Cloud-banner discovered the truth by his magic arts,
-and he and his queen started to run with Cloud-chariot's wife Sandal.
-
-At that moment Shell-crest returned from his worship of Shiva. He saw
-the rock stained with blood, and cried: "Alas for me, poor sinner!
-Surely that noble, merciful creature has given his body to Garuda in
-place of mine. I must find him. Where has the great being been carried
-by my enemy? If I find him alive, then I shall not sink into the
-slough of infamy." So he followed weeping the broad trail of blood.
-
-Now Garuda noticed that Cloud-chariot was happy while being eaten, and
-he thought: "This must be some strange, great being, for he is happy
-while I am eating him. He does not die, and what remains of him is
-thrilled with delight. And he turns a gracious, benevolent look upon
-me. Surely, he is no serpent, but some great spirit. I will stop eating
-him and ask him."
-
-But while he reflected, Cloud-chariot said: "O king of birds, why do
-you stop? There is still some flesh and blood on me, and I see that you
-are not satisfied. Pray continue to eat."
-
-When the king of birds heard these remarkable words, he said: "You are
-no serpent. Tell me who you are."
-
-But Cloud-chariot continued to urge him: "Certainly I am a serpent.
-What does the question mean? Continue your meal. What fool would begin
-a thing and then stop?"
-
-At that moment Shell-crest shouted from afar: "O Garuda, do not commit
-a great and reckless crime. What madness is this? He is not a serpent.
-I am the serpent."
-
-And he ran between them and spoke again to the agitated bird: "O
-Garuda, what madness is this? Do you not see that I have the hood and
-the forked tongue? Do you not see how gentle his appearance is?"
-
-While he was speaking, Cloud-chariot's wife Sandal and his parents
-hurried up. And when his parents saw how he was lacerated, they wept
-aloud and lamented: "Alas, my son! Alas, Cloud-chariot! Alas for my
-merciful darling, who gave his life for others!"
-
-But when they cried: "Alas, Garuda! How could you do this thoughtless
-thing?" then Garuda was filled with remorse and thought: "Alas!
-How could I be mad enough to eat a future Buddha? This must be
-Cloud-chariot, who gives his life for others, whose fame is trumpeted
-abroad through all the world. If he is dead, I am a sinner, and ought
-to burn myself alive. Why does the fruit of the poison-tree of sin
-taste sweet?"
-
-While Garuda was thus deep in anxious thought, Cloud-chariot saw his
-relatives gathered, fell down, and died from the pain of his wounds.
-Then, while his grief-stricken parents were loudly lamenting, while
-Shell-crest was accusing himself, Sandal looked up to heaven and, in
-a voice stammering with tears, reproached the goddess Gauri who had
-graciously given her this husband: "Oh, Mother! You told me that the
-fairy prince should be my husband, but it is my fate that you spoke
-falsely."
-
-Then Gauri appeared in a visible form, and said: "Daughter, my words
-are not false." And she sprinkled Cloud-chariot with nectar from a
-jar. And straightway he stood up alive, unhurt and more beautiful than
-before.
-
-As they all bent low in worship, and Cloud-chariot rose only to bend
-again, the goddess said: "My son, I am pleased with your gift of your
-own body. With my own hand I anoint you king of the fairies." And she
-anointed Cloud-chariot with liquor from the jar, and then disappeared,
-followed by the worship of the company. And showers of heavenly
-blossoms fell from the sky, and the drums of the gods were joyfully
-beaten in heaven.
-
-Then Garuda reverently said to Cloud-chariot: "O King, I am pleased
-with your more than human character. For you have done a strange thing
-of unparalleled nobility, to be marvelled at throughout the universe,
-to be written upon the walls of heaven. Therefore I am at your service.
-Choose from me what boon you will."
-
-The noble creature said to Garuda: "O Garuda, you must repent and eat
-no more serpents. And you must restore to life those that you ate
-before, who now are nothing but bones."
-
-And Garuda said: "So be it. I will eat no serpents hereafter. And those
-that I have eaten shall come to life."
-
-Then all the serpents who had been eaten down to the bones, suddenly
-stood up. And through the grace of Gauri all the leading fairies
-learned immediately the wonderful deed of Cloud-chariot. So they all
-came and bowed at his feet and took him, freshly anointed by the
-very hand of Gauri, with his rejoicing relatives and friends to the
-Himalaya mountain. There Cloud-chariot lived happily with his father
-and his mother and his wife Sandal and Friend-wealth and the generous
-Shell-crest. And he ruled the fairy world radiant with gems.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this long, strange story, he said to the king:
-"O King, tell me. Which was the more self-sacrificing, Cloud-chariot or
-Shell-crest? If you know and do not tell, then the curse I mentioned
-before will be fulfilled."
-
-And the king said: "There was nothing remarkable in what Cloud-chariot
-did. He was prepared for it by the experiences of many past lives. But
-Shell-crest deserves praise. He was saved from death. His enemy had
-another victim, and was far away. Yet he ran after and offered his body
-to Garuda."
-
-When the goblin heard this, he went back to the sissoo tree. And the
-king returned to catch him again.
-
-
-
-
-SIXTEENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The King who died for Love of his General's Wife; the General follows
-him in Death. Which is the more worthy?_
-
-
-Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder as before, and started. And the goblin said to him: "O King, I
-will tell you another little story to relieve your weariness. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long ago there was a city named Golden City on the bank of the Ganges,
-where a quarter of the old perfect virtue still lingers in these evil
-days. There was a king named Glorious, and he deserved the name. His
-bravery kept the world from being overflowed, like the shore of the sea.
-
-In this king's city lived a great merchant, who had a daughter named
-Passion. Everyone who saw her fell in love and went mad with passion.
-
-When she grew to be a young woman, the virtuous merchant went to King
-Glorious and said: "Your Majesty, I have a daughter, the gem of the
-three worlds, and she is old enough to marry. I could not give her to
-anyone without consulting your Majesty. For you are the master of all
-gems in the world. Pray marry her and thus lay me under obligations."
-
-So the king sent his own Brahmans to examine her qualities. But when
-the Brahmans saw her supreme loveliness, they were troubled and
-thought: "If the king should marry her, his kingdom would be ruined.
-He would think only of her, and would doubtless neglect the kingdom.
-Therefore we must not report her good qualities to the king."
-
-So they returned to the king and said: "Your Majesty, she has bad
-qualities." So the king did not marry the merchant's daughter. But he
-bade the merchant give his daughter to a general named Force. And she
-lived happily with her husband in his house.
-
-After a time the lion of spring came dancing through the forest and
-slew the elephant of winter. And King Glorious went forth on the back
-of an elephant to see the spring festival. And the drum was beaten to
-warn virtuous women to stay within doors. Otherwise they would have
-fallen in love with his beauty, and lovesickness might be expected.
-
-But when Passion heard the drum, she did not like to be left alone.
-She went out on the balcony, that the king might see her. She seemed
-like the flame of love which the spring-time was fanning with southern
-breezes. And the king saw her, and his whole being was shaken. He felt
-her beauty sinking deep in his heart like a victorious arrow of Love,
-and he fainted.
-
-His servants brought him back to consciousness, and he returned to the
-city. There he made inquiries and learned that this was Passion whom he
-had rejected before. So he banished from the country the Brahmans who
-had said that she had bad qualities, and he thought longingly of her
-every day.
-
-And as he thought of her, he burned over the flame of love, and wasted
-away day and night. And though from shame he tried to conceal it, he
-finally told the reason of his anguish to responsible people who asked
-him.
-
-They said: "Do not suffer. Why do you not seize her?" But the virtuous
-king would not do it.
-
-Then General Force heard the story. He came and bowed at the feet
-of the king and said: "Your Majesty, she is the wife of your slave,
-therefore she is your slave. I give her to you of my own accord. Pray
-take my wife. Or better yet, I will leave her here in the palace. Then
-you cannot be blamed if you marry her." And the general begged and
-insisted.
-
-But the king became angry and said: "I am a king. How can I do such a
-wicked thing? If I should transgress, who would be virtuous? You are
-devoted to me. Why do you urge me to a sin which is pleasant for the
-moment, but causes great sorrow in the next world? If you abandon your
-wedded wife, I shall not pardon you. How could a man in my position
-overlook such a transgression? It is better to die." Thus the king
-argued against it. For the truly great throw away life rather than
-virtue. And when all the citizens came together and urged him, he was
-steadfast and refused.
-
-So he slowly shrivelled away over the fever-flame of love and died.
-There was nothing left of King Glorious except his glory. And the
-general could not endure the death of his king. He burned himself
-alive. The actions of devoted men are blameless.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin on the king's shoulder had told this story, he asked
-the king: "O King, which of these two, the king and the general, was
-the more deserving? Remember the curse before you answer."
-
-The king said: "I think the king was the more deserving."
-
-Then the goblin said reproachfully: "O King, why was not the general
-better? He offered the king a wife like that, whose charms he knew from
-a long married life. And when his king died, he burned himself like
-a faithful man. But the king gave her up without really knowing her
-attractions."
-
-Then the king laughed and said: "True enough, but not surprising. The
-general was a gentleman born, and acted as he did from devotion to his
-superior. For servants must protect their masters even at the cost
-of their own lives. But kings are like mad elephants who cannot be
-goaded into obedience, who break the binding-chain of virtue. They are
-insolent, and their judgment trickles from them with the holy water of
-consecration. Their eyes are blinded by the hurricane of power, and
-they do not see the road. From the most ancient times, even the kings
-who conquered the world have been maddened by love and have fallen into
-misfortune. But this king, though he ruled the whole world, though he
-was maddened by the girl Passion, preferred to die rather than set his
-foot on the path of iniquity. He was a hero. He was the better of the
-two."
-
-Then the goblin escaped by magic from the king's shoulder and went
-back. And the king pursued him, undiscouraged. No great man stops in
-the middle of the hardest undertaking.
-
-[Illustration: "Shall I go into the fire or go home?"]
-
-
-
-
-SEVENTEENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Youth who went through the Proper Ceremonies. Why did he fail to
-win the magic spell?_
-
-
-Then the king went back through the night to the cemetery filled with
-ghouls, terrible with funeral piles that seemed like ghosts with
-wagging tongues of flame. But when he came to the sissoo tree, he was
-surprised to see a great many bodies hanging on the tree. They were all
-alike, and in each was a goblin twitching its limbs.
-
-And the king thought: "Ah, what does this mean? Why does that magic
-goblin keep wasting my time? For I do not know which of all these I
-ought to take. If I should not succeed in this night's endeavour, then
-I would burn myself alive rather than become a laughing-stock."
-
-But the goblin understood the king's purpose, and was pleased with
-his character. So he gave up his magic arts. Then the king saw only
-one goblin in one body. He took him down as before, put him on his
-shoulder, and started once more.
-
-And as he walked along, the goblin said: "O King, if you have no
-objections, I will tell you a story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Ujjain, whose people delight in noble happiness,
-and feel no longing for heaven. In that city there is real darkness at
-night, real intelligence in poetry, real madness in elephants, real
-coolness in pearls, sandal, and moonlight.
-
-There lived a king named Moonshine. He had as counsellor a famous
-Brahman named Heaven-lord, rich in money, rich in piety, rich in
-learning. And the counsellor had a son named Moon-lord.
-
-This son went one day to a great resort of gamblers to play. There the
-dice, beautiful as the eyes of gazelles, were being thrown constantly.
-And Calamity seemed to be looking on, thinking: "Whom shall I embrace?"
-And the loud shouts of angry gamblers seemed to suggest the question:
-"Who is there that would not be fleeced here, were he the god of wealth
-himself?"
-
-This hall the youth entered, and played with dice. He staked his
-clothes and everything else, and the gamblers won it all. Then he
-wagered money he did not have, and lost that. And when they asked him
-to pay, he could not. So the gambling-master caught him and beat him
-with clubs.
-
-When he was bruised all over by the clubs, the Brahman youth became
-motionless like a stone, and pretended to be dead, and waited. After he
-had lain thus for two or three days, the heartless gambling-master said
-to the gamblers: "He lies like a stone. Take him somewhere and throw
-him into a blind well. I will pay you the money he owes."
-
-So the gamblers picked Moon-lord up and went far into the forest,
-looking for a well. Then one old gambler said to the others: "He is as
-good as dead. What is the use of throwing him into a well now? We will
-leave him here and go back and say we have left him in a well." And all
-the rest agreed, and left him there, and went back.
-
-When they were gone, Moon-lord rose and entered a deserted temple to
-Shiva. When he had rested a little there, he thought in great anguish:
-"Ah, I trusted the rascally gamblers, and they cheated me. Where shall
-I go now, naked and dusty as I am? What would my father say if he
-saw me now, or any relative, or any friend? I will stay here for the
-present, and at night I will go out and try to find food somehow to
-appease my hunger."
-
-While he reflected in weariness and nakedness, the sun grew less hot
-and disappeared. Then a terrible hermit named Stake came there, and he
-had smeared his body with ashes. When he had seen Moon-lord and asked
-who he was and heard his story, he said, as the youth bent low before
-him: "Sir, you have come to my hermitage, a guest fainting with hunger.
-Rise, bathe, and partake of the meal I have gained by begging."
-
-Then Moon-lord said to him: "Holy sir, I am a Brahman. How can I
-partake of such a meal?"
-
-Then the hermit-magician went into his hut and out of tenderness to his
-guest he thought of a magic spell which grants all desires. And the
-spell appeared in bodily form, and said: "What shall I do?" And the
-hermit said: "Treat that man as an honoured guest."
-
-Then Moon-lord was astonished to see a golden palace rise before him
-and a grove with women in it. They came to him from the palace and
-said: "Sir, rise, come, bathe, eat, and meet our mistress." So they led
-him in and gave him a chance to bathe and anoint himself and dress.
-Then they led him to another room.
-
-There the youth saw a woman of wonderful beauty, whom the Creator must
-have made to see what he could do. She rose and offered him half of
-her seat. And he ate heavenly food and various fruits and chewed betel
-leaves and sat happily with her on the couch.
-
-In the morning he awoke and saw the temple to Shiva, but the heavenly
-creature was gone, and the palace, and the women in it. So he went out
-in distress, and the hermit in his hut smiled and asked him how he had
-spent the night. And he said: "Holy sir, through your kindness I spent
-a happy night, but I shall die without that heavenly creature."
-
-Then the hermit laughed and said: "Stay here. You shall have the same
-happiness again to-night." So Moon-lord enjoyed those delights every
-night through the favour of the hermit.
-
-Finally Moon-lord came to see what a mighty spell that was. So, driven
-on by his fate, he respectfully begged the hermit: "Holy sir, if you
-really feel pity for a poor suppliant like me, teach me that spell
-which has such power."
-
-And when he insisted, the hermit said: "You could never win the spell.
-One has to stand in the water to win it. And it weaves a net of magic
-to bewilder the man who is repeating the words, so that he cannot win
-it. For as he mumbles it, he seems to lead another life, first a baby,
-then a boy, then a youth, then a husband, then a father. And he falsely
-imagines that such and such people are his friends, such and such his
-enemies. He forgets his real life and his desire to win the spell. But
-if a man mumbles it constantly for twenty-four years, and remembers
-his own life, and is not deceived by the network of magic, and then at
-the end burns himself alive, he comes out of the water, and has real
-magic power. It comes only to a good pupil, and if a teacher tries to
-teach it to a bad pupil, the teacher loses it too. Now you have the
-real benefit through my magic power. Why insist on more? If I lost my
-powers, then your happiness would go too."
-
-But Moon-lord said: "I can do anything. Do not fear, holy sir." And the
-hermit promised to teach him the spell. What will holy men not do out
-of regard to those who seek aid?
-
-So the hermit went to the river bank, and said: "My son, mumble the
-words of the spell. And while you are leading an imaginary life, you
-will at last be awakened by my magic. Then plunge into the magic fire
-which you will see. I will stand here on the bank while you mumble it."
-
-So he purified himself and purified Moon-lord and made him sip water,
-and then he taught him the magic spell. And Moon-lord bowed to his
-teacher on the bank, and plunged into the river.
-
-And as he mumbled the words of the spell in the water, he was
-bewildered by its magic. He forgot all about his past life, and went
-through another life. He was born in another city as the son of a
-Brahman. Then he grew up, was consecrated, and went to school. Then he
-took a wife, and after many experiences half pleasant, half painful,
-he found himself the father of a family. Then he lived for some years
-with his parents and his relatives, devoted to wife and children, and
-interested in many things.
-
-While he was experiencing all these labours of another life, the
-hermit took pity on him and repeated magic words to enlighten him. And
-Moon-lord was enlightened in the midst of his new life. He remembered
-himself and his teacher, and saw that the other life was a network of
-magic. So he prepared to enter the fire in order to win magic power.
-
-But older people and reliable people and his parents and his relatives
-tried to prevent him. In spite of them he hankered after heavenly
-pleasures, and went to the bank of a river where a funeral pile had
-been made ready. And his relatives went with him. But when he got there
-he saw that his old parents and his wife and his little children were
-weeping.
-
-And he was perplexed, and thought: "Alas! If I enter the fire, all
-these my own people will die. And I do not know whether my teacher's
-promise will come true or not. Shall I go into the fire, or go home?
-No, no. How could a teacher with such powers promise falsely? Indeed, I
-must enter the fire." And he did.
-
-And he was astonished to feel the fire as cool as snow, and lost his
-fear of it. Then he came out of the water of the river, and found
-himself on the bank. He saw his teacher standing there, and fell at his
-feet, and told him the whole story, ending with the blazing funeral
-pile.
-
-Then his teacher said: "My son, I think you must have made some
-mistake. Otherwise, why did the fire seem cool to you? That never
-happens in the winning of this magic spell."
-
-And Moon-lord said: "Holy sir, I do not remember making any mistake."
-Then his teacher was eager to know about it, so he tried to remember
-the spell himself. But it would not come to him or to his pupil. So
-they went away sad, having lost their magic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king: "O King,
-explain the matter to me. Why did they lose their magic, when
-everything had been done according to precept?"
-
-Then the king said: "O magic creature, I see that you are only trying
-to waste my time. Still, I will tell you. Magic powers do not come to
-a man because he does things that are hard, but because he does things
-with a pure heart. The Brahman youth was defective at that point. He
-hesitated even when his mind was enlightened. Therefore he failed to
-win the magic. And the teacher lost his magic because he taught it to
-an unworthy pupil."
-
-Then the goblin went back to his home. And the king ran to find him,
-never hesitating.
-
-
-
-
-EIGHTEENTH GOBLIN
-
- _The Boy whom his Parents, the King, and the Giant conspired to Kill.
- Why did he laugh at the moment of death?_
-
-
-Then the king went to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder
-as before, and started in silence. And the goblin on his shoulder
-saw that he was silent and said: "O King, why are you so obstinate?
-Go home. Spend the night in rest. You ought not to take me to that
-rascally monk. But if you insist, then I will tell you another story.
-Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Brilliant-peak. There lived a glorious king
-named Moon, who delighted the eyes of his subjects. Wise men said that
-he was brave, generous, and the very home of beauty. But in spite of
-all his wealth, he was very sad at heart. For he found no wife worthy
-of him.
-
-One day this king went with soldiers on horseback into a great wood, to
-hunt there and forget his sorrow. There he split open many boars with
-his arrows as the sun splits the black darkness, and made fierce lions
-into cushions for his arrows, and slew mountainous monsters with his
-terrible darts.
-
-As he hunted, he spurred his horse and beat him terribly. And the horse
-was so hurt by the spur and the whip that he could not tell rough from
-smooth. He dashed off quicker than the wind, and in a moment carried
-the king into another forest a hundred miles away.
-
-There the king lost his way, and as he wandered about wearily, he saw
-a great lake. He stopped there, unsaddled his horse, let him bathe and
-drink, and found him some grass in the shade of the trees. Then he
-bathed and drank himself, and when he had rested, he looked all about
-him.
-
-And he saw a hermit's daughter of marvellous beauty under an ashoka
-tree with another girl. She had no ornaments but flowers. She was
-charming even in a dress made of bark. She was particularly attractive
-because of her thick masses of hair arranged in a girlish way.
-
-[Illustration: The giant laughed aloud, spit fire in his wrath, and
-showed his dreadful fangs.]
-
-And the king fell in love with her and thought: "Who is she? Is she a
-goddess come to bathe in these waters? Or Gauri, separated from her
-husband Shiva, leading a hard life to win him again? Or the lovely
-moon, taking a human form, and trying to be attractive in the daytime?
-I will go to her and find out."
-
-So he drew near to her. And when she saw him coming, she was astonished
-at his beauty and dropped her hands, which had been weaving a garland
-of flowers. And she thought: "Who can he be in this forest? Some fairy
-perhaps. Blessèd are my eyes this day."
-
-So she rose, modestly looking another way, and started to go away,
-though her limbs failed her. Then the king approached and said:
-"Beautiful maiden, I have come a long distance, and you never saw me
-before. I ask only to look at you, and you should welcome me. Is this
-hermit manners, to run away?"
-
-Then her clever friend made the king sit down and treated him as an
-honoured guest. And the king respectfully asked her: "My good girl,
-what happy family does your friend adorn? What are the syllables of her
-name, which must be a delight to the ear? Or why at her age does she
-torture a body as delicate as a flower with a hermit's life in a lonely
-wood?"
-
-And the friend answered: "Your Majesty, she is the daughter of the
-hermit Kanva and the heavenly nymph Menaka. She grew up here in the
-hermitage, and her name is Lotus-bloom. With her father's permission
-she came here to the lake to bathe. And her father's hermitage is not
-far from here."
-
-Then the king was delighted. He mounted his horse and rode to the
-hermitage of holy Kanva, to ask for the girl. And he entered the
-hermitage in modest garb, leaving his horse outside. Then he was
-surrounded by hermits with hoary crowns and bark garments like the
-trees, and saw the sage Kanva radiant and cool like the moon. And he
-drew near and fell at his feet.
-
-And the wise hermit greeted him and let him rest, then said: "My son
-Moon, I will tell you something to your advantage. Listen. I know what
-fear of death there is in mortal creatures. Why then do you uselessly
-kill the wild beasts? Warriors were made by the Creator to protect the
-timid. Therefore protect your subjects in righteousness, and root out
-evil. As Happiness flees before you, strive to overtake her with all
-your means, elephants and horses and things. Enjoy your kingship. Be
-generous. Become glorious. Abandon this vice of hunting, this sport of
-Death. For slayer and slain are equally deceived. Why spend your time
-in such an evil pursuit?"
-
-The sensible king was pleased and said: "Holy sir, I am instructed. And
-great is my gratitude for this instruction. From now on I hunt no more.
-Let the wild animals live without fear."
-
-Then the hermit said: "I am pleased with your protection of the
-animals. Choose any boon you will."
-
-Then the quick-witted king said: "Holy sir, if you are kindly disposed,
-give me your daughter Lotus-bloom."
-
-So the hermit gave him his daughter, the child of the nymph, who
-then came up after her bath. So they were married, and the king wore
-cheerful garments, and Lotus-bloom was adorned by the hermits' wives.
-And the weeping hermits accompanied them in procession to the edge of
-the hermitage. Then the king took his wife Lotus-bloom, mounted his
-horse, and started for his city.
-
-At last the sun, seeing the king tired with his long journeying, sank
-wearily behind the western mountain. And fawn-eyed night appeared, clad
-in the garment of darkness, like a woman going to meet her lover. And
-the king saw an ashvattha tree on the shore of a pond in a spot covered
-with grass and twigs, and he decided to spend the night there.
-
-So he dismounted, fed and watered his horse, brought water from the
-pond, and rested with his belovèd. And they passed the night there.
-
-In the morning he arose, performed his devotions, and prepared to set
-out with his wife to rejoin his soldiers. Then, like a cloud black as
-soot with tawny lightning-hair, there appeared a great giant. He wore
-a chaplet of human entrails, a cord of human hair, he was chewing the
-head of a man, and drinking blood from a skull.
-
-The giant laughed aloud, spit fire in his wrath, and showed his
-dreadful fangs. And he scolded the king and said: "Scoundrel! I am
-a giant named Flame-face. This tree is my home; even the gods do
-not dare to trespass here. But you and your wife have trespassed and
-enjoyed yourselves. Now swallow your own impudence, you rascal! You are
-lovesick, so I will split open your heart and eat it, and I will drink
-your blood."
-
-The king was frightened when he saw that the giant was invincible,
-and his wife was trembling, so he said respectfully: "I trespassed
-ignorantly. Forgive me. I am your guest, seeking protection in your
-hermitage. And I will give you a human sacrifice, so that you will be
-satisfied. Be merciful then and forget your anger."
-
-Then the giant forgot his anger, and thought: "Very well. Why not?"
-And he said: "O King, I want a noble, intelligent Brahman boy seven
-years old, who shall give himself up of his own accord for your sake.
-And when he is killed, his mother must hold his hands tightly to the
-ground, and his father must hold his feet, and you must cut off his
-head with your own sword. If you do this within seven days, then I will
-forgive the insult you have offered me. If not, I will kill you and all
-your people."
-
-And the king was so frightened that he consented. Then the giant
-disappeared.
-
-Then King Moon mounted his horse with his wife Lotus-bloom and rode
-away sad at heart, seeking for his soldiers. And he thought: "Alas! I
-was bewildered by hunting and by love, and I find myself ruined. Where
-can I find such a sacrifice for the giant? Well, I will go to my own
-city now, and see what happens."
-
-So he continued his search, and found his soldiers and his city
-Brilliant-peak. There his subjects were delighted because he had found
-a wife worthy of him, and they made a great feast. But it was a day of
-despondency and dreadful agony for the king.
-
-On the next day he told his counsellors the whole story. And one
-counsellor named Wise said: "Your Majesty, do not despair. I will find
-a victim for the sacrifice. The world is a strange place."
-
-Thus the counsellor comforted the king, and made a statue of a boy out
-of gold. And he sent the statue about the land, with constant beating
-of drums and this proclamation: "We want a noble Brahman boy seven
-years old who will offer himself as a sacrifice to a giant with the
-permission of his parents. And when he is killed, his mother must hold
-his hands, and his father must hold his feet. And as a reward, the king
-will give his parents a hundred villages and this statue of gold and
-gems."
-
-Now there was a Brahman boy on a farm, who was only seven years old,
-but wonderfully brave. He was of great beauty, and even in childhood he
-was always thinking about others. He said to the heralds: "Gentlemen, I
-will give you my body. Wait a moment. I will hurry back after telling
-my parents."
-
-So they told the boy to go. And he went into the house, bowed before
-his parents, and said: "Mother! Father! I am going to give this
-wretched body of mine in order to win lasting happiness. Pray permit
-me. And I will take the king's gift, this statue of myself made of gold
-and gems, and give it to you together with the hundred villages. Thus I
-will pay my debt to you, and do some real good. And you will never be
-poor again, and will have plenty more sons."
-
-But his parents immediately said: "Son, what are you saying? Have you
-the rheumatism? Or are you possessed by a devil? If not, why do you
-talk nonsense? Who would sacrifice his child for money? And what child
-would give his body?"
-
-But the boy said: "I am not mad. Listen. My words are full of sense.
-The body is the seat of unnameable impurities, it is loathsome and
-full of pain. It perishes in no long time at best. If some good can be
-done with the worthless thing, that is a great advantage in this weary
-life, so wise men say. And what good is there except helping others?
-If anyone can serve his parents so easily, then how lightly should the
-body be esteemed!"
-
-Thus the boy, with his bold words and his firm purpose, persuaded his
-grieving parents. And he went and got from the king's men the golden
-statue and the hundred villages, and gave them to his parents.
-
-So the boy with his parents followed the king's men to the city
-Brilliant-peak. And the king looked upon the brave boy as a magic jewel
-for his own preservation, and rejoiced greatly. He adorned the boy with
-garlands and perfumes, put him on an elephant, and took him with his
-parents to the home of the giant.
-
-There the priest traced a magic circle beside the tree, and reverently
-lit the holy fire. Then the horrible giant Flame-face appeared,
-mumbling words of his own. He staggered, for he was drunk with blood,
-and snorted and yawned. His eyes flashed fire and his shadow made the
-whole world dark.
-
-And the king said respectfully: "Great being, here is the human
-sacrifice you asked for, and this is the seventh day since I promised
-it. Be merciful. Accept this sacrifice."
-
-And the giant licked his chops, and looked the boy over, who was to be
-the sacrifice. Then the noble boy thought: "I have done some good with
-this body of mine. May I never rest in heaven or in eternal salvation,
-but may I have many lives in which to do some good with my body." And
-the air was filled with the chariots of gods who rained down flowers.
-
-Then the boy was laid before the giant. His mother held his hands, and
-his father held his feet. When the king drew his sword and was ready
-to strike, the boy laughed so heartily that all of them, even the
-giant, forgot what they were doing, looked at the boy's face, and bowed
-low before him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this strange story, he asked the king: "O
-King, why did the boy laugh at the moment of death? I have a great
-curiosity about this point. If you know and will not tell, then your
-head will fly into a hundred pieces."
-
-And the king said: "Listen. I will tell you why the boy laughed. When
-danger comes to any weak creature, he cries for life to his mother
-and father. If they are not there, he begs protection from the king,
-whom heaven made his protector. Failing the king, he cries to a god.
-Some one of these should be his protector. But in the case of this boy
-everything was contrary. His parents held his hands and feet because
-they wanted money. And the king was ready to kill him with his own
-hand, to save his own life. And the giant, who is a kind of a god,
-had come there especially to eat him. So the boy thought: 'They are
-ridiculously fooled about their bodies, which are fragile, worthless,
-the seat of pain and suffering. The bodies of the greatest gods perish.
-And such creatures as these imagine that their bodies will endure!' So
-when he saw their strange madness, and felt that his own wishes were
-fulfilled, the Brahman boy laughed in astonishment and delight."
-
-Then the goblin slipped from the king's shoulder and went back to his
-home. And the king followed with determination. The heart of a good man
-is like the heart of the ocean. It cannot be shaken.
-
-
-
-
-NINETEENTH GOBLIN
-
-_The Man, his Wife, and her Lover, who all died for Love. Which was the
-most foolish?_
-
-
-Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, took the goblin on his
-shoulder, and set out in haste. And as he walked along, the goblin on
-his shoulder said: "O King, I will tell you a story about a great love.
-Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Ujjain, which seems like a divine city made by
-the Creator for the pious who have fallen from heaven. In this city
-there was a famous king named Lotus-belly. He delighted the good, and
-defeated the king of the demons.
-
-While he was king, a merchant named Fortune, richer than the god of
-wealth, lived in the city. He had one daughter named Love-cluster, who
-seemed the model from whom the Creator had made the nymphs of heaven.
-This merchant gave his daughter to a merchant named Jewel-guard from
-Copper City.
-
-As he was a tender father and had no other children, the merchant
-stayed with his daughter Love-cluster and her husband. Now Love-cluster
-came to hate Jewel-guard as a sick man hates a pungent, biting
-medicine. But the beautiful woman was dearer than life to her husband,
-dear as long-gathered wealth to a miser.
-
-One day Jewel-guard started for Copper City to pay a loving visit to
-his parents. Then the hot summer came, and the roads were blocked for
-travellers by the sharp arrows of the sun. The winds blew soft with the
-fragrance of jasmine and trumpet-flower, like sighs from the mouths of
-mountains separated from the spring-time. And wind-swept dust-clouds
-flew to the sky like messengers from the burning earth begging for
-clouds. And the feverish days moved slowly like wayfarers who cling to
-the shade of trees. And the nights clad in pale yellow moonlight became
-very feeble without the invigorating embrace of winter.
-
-[Illustration: A merchant named Fortune, richer than the God of
-Wealth.]
-
-At this time Love-cluster, anointed with cooling sandal, and clad in
-thin garments, stood at her lattice-window. And she saw a handsome
-youth with a friend whom he trusted. He seemed the god of love born
-anew and seeking his bride. He was the son of the king's priest, and
-his name was Lotus-lake.
-
-And when Lotus-lake saw the lovely girl, he expanded with delight as
-lotuses in a lake expand at the sight of the moon. When the two young
-people saw each other, their hearts embraced each other at the bidding
-of Love, their teacher.
-
-So Lotus-lake was smitten with love, and was led home with difficulty
-by his friend. And Love-cluster was equally maddened by love. First she
-learned from her friend his name and home, then slowly withdrew to her
-room. There she thought of him and became feverish with love, simply
-tossing on her couch, seeing nothing and hearing nothing.
-
-After two or three days spent in this way, she felt bashful and
-fearful, pale and thin from the separation, and hopeless of union with
-her lover. So, as if drawn on by the moonbeam which shone through her
-window, she went out at night when her people were asleep, determined
-to die. And she came to a pool under a tree in her garden.
-
-There stood a family image of the goddess Gauri, set up by her father.
-She drew near to this image, bowed before the goddess, praised her,
-and said: "O Goddess, since I could not have Lotus-lake as my husband
-in this life, may he be my husband in some other life!" And she made a
-noose of her garment, and tied it to the ashoka tree before the goddess.
-
-At that moment her trusty friend awoke, and not finding her in the
-room, hunted about and came luckily into the garden. There she saw the
-girl fastening the noose about her neck, and she cried, "No, no!" And
-running up, she cut the noose.
-
-When Love-cluster saw that it was her own friend who had run up and
-taken the noose away, she fell to the ground in great agony. But her
-friend comforted her and asked the reason of her sorrow. Then she arose
-and said: "Jasmine, my friend, I cannot be united with him I love. I am
-dependent on my father and other people. Death is the happiest thing
-for me."
-
-And as she spoke, she was terribly scorched by the fiery darts of
-love, and determined to feel no more hope, and fainted. And her friend
-Jasmine lamented: "Alas! Love is a hard master. It has reduced her to
-this condition." But she gradually brought her back to life with cool
-water and fans and things. She made an easy bed of lotus-leaves. She
-put pearls cool as snow on her heart.
-
-Then Love-cluster came to herself and slowly said to her weeping
-friend: "My dear, the fire within me cannot be quenched by such things
-as pearls. If you want to save my life, be clever enough to bring my
-lover to me."
-
-And the loving Jasmine said: "My dear, the night is almost over. In the
-morning I will bring your lover here to meet you. Be brave and go now
-to your room."
-
-Love-cluster was contented. She took the pearls from her neck and gave
-them to her friend as a present. And she said: "Let us go now. Then in
-the morning you must keep your promise." So she went to her room.
-
-In the morning Jasmine crept out without being seen to hunt for the
-house of Lotus-lake. When she got there, she found Lotus-lake under a
-tree in the garden. He was lying on a couch of lotus-leaves moistened
-with sandal, and the friend who knew his secret was fanning him with
-plantain-leaf fans, for he was tortured by the flames of love. And
-Jasmine hid, to find out whether this was lovesickness for her friend
-or not.
-
-Then the friend said to Lotus-lake: "My friend, comfort your heart by
-glancing a moment at this charming garden. Do not be so troubled."
-
-But he said to his friend: "My heart has been stolen by Love-cluster.
-It is no longer in my body. How can I comfort it? Love has made an
-empty quiver of me. So invent some plan by which I may meet the thief
-of my heart."
-
-Then Jasmine came out joyfully and without fear and showed herself. And
-she said: "Sir, Love-cluster has sent me to you, and I am the bearer of
-a message to you. Is it good manners to enter the heart of an innocent
-girl by force, steal her thoughts, and run away? It is strange, but
-the sweet girl is ready to give her person and her life to you, her
-charmer. For day and night she heaves sighs hot as the smoke from the
-fire of love that burns in her heart. And teardrops carry her rouge
-away and fall, like bees longing for the honey of her lotus-face. So,
-if you wish it, I will tell you what is good for both of you."
-
-And Lotus-lake said: "My good girl, the words which tell me that my
-love is lonely and longing, frighten me and comfort me. You are our
-only refuge. Devise a plan."
-
-And Jasmine answered: "This very night I will bring Love-cluster
-secretly to the garden. You must be outside. Then I will cleverly let
-you in, and so you two will be united." Thus Jasmine delighted the
-Brahman's son, and went away successful to please Love-cluster with the
-news.
-
-Then the sun and the daylight fled away, pursuing the twilight. And
-the East adorned her face with the moon. And the white night-blooming
-lotuses laughed, their faces expanding at the thought of the glory that
-was coming to them. At that hour the lover Lotus-lake came secretly,
-adorned and filled with longing, to the garden-gate of his belovèd.
-And Jasmine led Love-cluster secretly into the garden, for she had
-lived through the day somehow.
-
-Then Jasmine made her sit down under the mango trees, while she went
-and let Lotus-lake in. So he entered and looked upon Love-cluster as
-the traveller looks upon the shade of trees with thick foliage. And
-as he drew near, she saw him and ran to him, for love took away her
-modesty, and she fell on his neck. "Where would you go? I have caught
-you, thief of my heart!" she cried. Then excessive joy stopped her
-breathing, and she died. She fell on the ground like a vine broken by
-the wind. Strange are the mysterious ways of Love.
-
-When Lotus-lake saw that terrible fall, he cried: "Oh, what does it
-mean?" And he fainted and fell down. Presently he came to himself, and
-took his darling on his lap. He embraced her and kissed her and wept
-terribly. He was so borne down by the terrible burden of grief that his
-own heart broke. And when they were both dead, the night seemed to die
-away in shame and fear.
-
-In the morning the relatives heard the story from the gardeners, and
-came there filled with timidity and wonder and grief and madness. They
-did not know what to do, but stood a long time with downcast eyes.
-Unfaithful women disgrace a family.
-
-Presently the husband Jewel-guard came back from his father's house in
-Copper City, filled with love for Love-cluster. When he came to his
-father-in-law's house and saw the business, he was blinded by tears
-and went thoughtfully into the garden. There he saw his wife dead in
-another man's arms, and his body was scorched by the flames of grief,
-and he died immediately.
-
-Then the whole household shouted and screamed so that all the citizens
-heard the story and came there. The demi-gods themselves were filled
-with pity and prayed to the goddess Gauri whose image had been set up
-there before by Love-cluster's father: "Oh, Mother, the merchant who
-set up this statue was always devoted to you. Show mercy to him in his
-affliction."
-
-And the gracious goddess heard their prayer. She said: "All three
-shall live again, and shall forget their love." Then through her
-grace they all arose like people waking from sleep. They were alive,
-and their love was gone. While all the people there rejoiced at what
-had happened, Lotus-lake went home, bending his head in shame. And the
-merchant took his shamefaced daughter and her husband and went into the
-house and made a feast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story on the road in the night, he said:
-"O King, which was the most foolish among those who died for love?
-If you know and do not tell, you must remember the curse I spoke of
-before."
-
-Then the king answered: "O magic creature, Jewel-guard was the most
-foolish of them. When he saw that his wife had died for love of another
-man, he should have been angry. Instead, he was loving, and died of
-grief."
-
-Then the goblin slipped from the king's shoulder and quickly set out
-for his home. And the king ran after him again, eager as before.
-
-
-
-
-TWENTIETH GOBLIN
-
- _The Four Brothers who brought a Dead Lion to Life. Which is to blame
- when he kills them all?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, took the goblin, put him on
-his shoulder, and started for the place he wished to reach. And as he
-walked along the road, the goblin began to talk again: "Bravo, King!
-You are a remarkable character. So I will tell you another story, and a
-strange one. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a city called Flower-city. There lived a king named
-Earth-boar. In his kingdom was a farm where a Brahman lived whose name
-was Vishnuswami. His wife was named Swaha. And four sons were born to
-them.
-
-After a time the father died, and the relatives took all the money. So
-the four brothers consulted together: "There is nothing for us to do
-here. Suppose we go somewhere." And after a long journey they came to
-the house of their maternal grandfather in a village called Sacrifice.
-The grandfather was dead, but their uncles sheltered them, and they
-continued their studies.
-
-But they did not amount to much, so in time their uncles became
-scornful in such matters as food and clothing. And they were troubled.
-
-Then the eldest took the others aside and said: "Brothers, no man can
-do anything anywhere on earth. Now I was wandering about discouraged,
-and I came to a wood. There I saw to-day a dead man whose limbs
-lay relaxed on the ground. And I wished for the same fate, and I
-thought: 'He is happy. He is free from the burden of woe.' So I made
-up my mind to die, and hanged myself with a rope from a tree. I lost
-consciousness, but before the breath of life was gone, the cord was
-cut and I fell to the ground. And when I came to myself, I saw a
-compassionate man who had happened by at that moment, and he was
-fanning me with his garment. And he said to me: 'My friend, you are
-an educated man. Tell me why you are so despondent. The righteous man
-finds happiness, the unrighteous man finds unhappiness because of his
-unrighteousness, and for no other reason. If you made up your mind to
-this because of unhappiness, practise righteousness instead. Why seek
-the pains of hell by suicide?' Thus the man comforted me and went away.
-And I gave up the idea of suicide and came here. You see I could not
-even die when fate was unwilling. Now I shall burn my body at some holy
-place, that I may not again feel the woes of poverty."
-
-Then the younger brothers said to him: "Sir, why is an intelligent man
-sad for lack of money? Do you not know that money is uncertain as an
-autumn cloud? No matter how carefully won and guarded, three things are
-fickle and bring sorrow at the last: evil friendships, a flirt, and
-money. The resolute and sensible man should by all means acquire that
-virtue which brings him Happiness a captive in bonds."
-
-So the eldest brother straightway plucked up heart, and said: "What
-virtue is it which we should acquire?"
-
-Then they all reflected, and took counsel together: "We will wander
-over the earth, and each of us will learn some one science." So they
-appointed a place for meeting, and the four brothers started in four
-different directions.
-
-After a time they all gathered at the meeting-place, and asked one
-another what they had learned. The first said: "I have learned a
-science by which I can take the skeleton of any animal whatever and put
-the proper kind of flesh on it."
-
-The second said: "I have learned a science by which I can put on the
-flesh-covered skeleton the proper hair and skin."
-
-The third said: "My science is this. When the skin and the flesh and
-the hair are there, I can put in the eyes and the other organs of
-sense."
-
-The fourth said: "When the organs are there, I can give the creature
-the breath of life."
-
-So all four went into the forest to find a skeleton and test their
-various sciences. As fate would have it, they found the skeleton of
-a lion there. And they took that, not knowing the difference.
-
-[Illustration: The lion arose and killed his four creators.]
-
-The first fitted out the skeleton with appropriate flesh. The second
-added the skin and hair. The third provided all the organs. The fourth
-gave life to the thing, and it was a lion. The lion arose with terrible
-massive mane, dreadful teeth in his mouth, and curving claws in his
-paws. He arose and killed his four creators, then ran into the forest.
-
-Thus the Brahman youths all perished because they did wrong to make
-a lion. Who could expect a good result from creating a bad-tempered
-creature? Thus, if fate opposes, even a virtue that has been painfully
-acquired does not profit, but rather injures. But the tree of manhood,
-with the water of intelligence poured into its watering-trench of
-conduct about the vigorous root of fate, generally bears good fruit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king who was walking
-through the night: "O King, remember the curse I mentioned, and tell me
-which of them was most to blame for creating the lion?"
-
-And the king reflected in silence: "He wants to escape again. Very
-well. I will catch him again." So he said: "The one who gave life to
-the lion, is the sinner. The others did not know what kind of an animal
-it was, and just showed their skill in creating flesh and skin and hair
-and organs. They were not to blame because they were ignorant. But the
-one who saw that it was a lion and gave it life just to exhibit his
-skill, he was guilty of the murder of Brahmans."
-
-Then the goblin went home. And the king followed him again, and came to
-the sissoo tree.
-
-
-
-
-TWENTY-FIRST GOBLIN
-
- _The Old Hermit who exchanged his Body for that of the Dead Boy. Why
- did he weep and dance?_
-
-
-Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder in spite of all its writhings, and set out in silence. And
-the goblin on his shoulder said: "O king of kings, you are terribly
-obstinate about this impossible task. So to amuse the weary journey I
-will tell a story. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Kalinga country was a city called Beautiful, where people lived
-as happily as in heaven. There ruled a famous king named Pradyumna. And
-in a part of this city was a region set apart by the king, where many
-Brahmans lived. Among them was a learned, wealthy, pious, hospitable
-Brahman named Sacrifice.
-
-In his old age a single son was born to him and his worthy wife. The
-boy grew under the fostering care of his father, and showed signs of
-excellence. He was called Devasoma by his father, and his parents were
-entirely devoted to him.
-
-In his sixteenth year the boy attracted everyone by his learning and
-modesty. Then he suddenly fell ill of a fever and died. When his father
-and mother saw that he was really dead, they embraced the body and wept
-aloud. But their love for him would not permit them to burn the body.
-
-So the old relatives gathered, and said to the father: "Brahman, life
-is imaginary like a city in the sky. Do you not know this, you who know
-things above and things below? The kings who enjoyed themselves like
-gods upon the earth, they have gone one by one to cemeteries filled
-with processions of weeping ghosts. Their bodies were burned by the
-flesh-devouring fire and eaten by jackals. No one could prevent it in
-their case. How much less in the case of others? Therefore, as you are
-a wise man, tell us what you mean by embracing this dead body?"
-
-So at last the relatives persuaded him to let his son go, and they put
-the body in a litter and brought it to the cemetery with weeping and
-wailing.
-
-At that time a hermit was fulfilling a hard vow, and was living in a
-hut in the cemetery. He was very thin because of his age and his hard
-life. His veins stuck out like cords to bind him, as if afraid that he
-would break in pieces. His hair was tawny like the lightning.
-
-This hermit heard the wailing of the people, and turned to his pupil
-who begged food for him. Now this pupil was proud and arrogant. And the
-hermit said: "My boy, what is this wailing we hear? Go outside and find
-out, then return and tell me why this unheard-of commotion is taking
-place."
-
-But the pupil said: "I will not go. Go yourself. My hour for begging is
-passing by."
-
-Then the teacher said: "Fool! Glutton! What do you mean by your hour
-for begging? Only one half of the first watch of the day is gone."
-
-Then the bad pupil became angry and said: "Decrepit old man! I am
-not your pupil. And you are not my teacher. I am going away. Do your
-begging yourself." And he angrily threw down his staff and bowl before
-the old man, and got up, and went away.
-
-Then the hermit laughed. He left his hut and went to the place where
-the dead Brahman boy had been brought to be burned. He saw how the
-people mourned over such youthful freshness dead, and felt his own age
-and weakness. So he made up his mind to exchange his body for the other
-by magic.
-
-He went aside and wept at the top of his voice. Then he danced with all
-the proper gestures.
-
-After that, full of the longing to enjoy the happiness of youth, he
-left his own withered body by magic and entered the body of the Brahman
-youth. So the Brahman youth came to life on the funeral pyre and stood
-up. And a cry of joy arose from all the relatives: "See! The boy is
-alive! He is alive!"
-
-Then the magician in the body of the Brahman boy said to the relatives:
-"I went to the other world, and Shiva gave me life and directed me to
-perform a great vow. So now I am going off to perform the vow. If I do
-not, my life will not last. Do you then go home, and I will come later."
-
-So he spoke to those gathered there, having made up his mind what to
-do, and sent them home full of joy and grief. He went himself and threw
-his old body into a pit, and then went off, a young man.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he said to King Triple-victory,
-who was walking through the night: "O King, when the magician entered
-another person's body, why did he weep before doing it, or why did he
-dance? I have a great curiosity about this point."
-
-And the king was afraid of the curse, so he broke silence and said:
-"Listen, goblin. He thought: 'I am leaving to-day this body with which
-I won magic powers, the body which my parents petted when I was a
-child.' So first he wept from grief, and from love of his body which he
-found it hard to leave. Then he thought: 'With a new body I can learn
-more magic.' So he danced from joy at getting youth."
-
-When the goblin heard this answer, he returned quickly to the sissoo
-tree. And the king pursued him, undismayed.
-
-
-
-
-TWENTY-SECOND GOBLIN
-
- _The Father and Son who married Daughter and Mother. What relation
- were their children?_
-
-
-The king paid no attention to the terrible witch of night, clad in
-black darkness, with the funeral piles as flaming eyes. He bravely went
-through the dreadful cemetery to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started as before. And as he walked along, the goblin
-said to him: "O King, I am very tired with these comings and goings,
-but you do not seem to be. So I will tell you my Great Puzzle. Listen."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long ago there was a king named Virtue in the southern country. He was
-the best of righteous men, and was born in a great family. His wife
-came from the Malwa country, and her name was Moonlight. And they had
-one daughter, whom they named Beauty.
-
-When this daughter was grown up, the relatives conspired to wreck the
-kingdom and drive King Virtue out. But he escaped by night, took a
-great many jewels, and fled from his kingdom with his beautiful wife
-and his daughter. He started for his father-in-law's house in Malwa,
-and came with his wife and daughter to the Vindhya forest. There they
-spent a weary night.
-
-In the morning the blessèd sun arose in the east, stretching out his
-rays like hands to warn the king not to go into the forest where
-robbers lived. The king went on foot with his trembling daughter and
-his wife, and their feet were wounded by the thorny grass. So they came
-to a fortified village. It was like the city of Death; for there were
-no righteous people there, and it was filled with robber-men who killed
-and robbed other people.
-
-As the king drew near with his fine garments and his gems, many robbers
-saw him from a distance, and ran out armed to rob him. When the king
-saw them coming, he said to his wife and daughter: "These are wild
-men. They must not touch you. Go into the thick woods." So the queen
-with her daughter Beauty fled in fear into the middle of the forest.
-
-But the brave king took his sword and shield and killed many of the
-wild men as they charged down, raining arrows on him. Then their leader
-gave an order, and all the robbers fell on the king at once, wounded
-every limb in his body, and killed him; for he was all alone. So the
-robbers took the jewels and went away.
-
-Now the queen had hidden in a thicket, and had seen her husband killed.
-Then she fled a long distance in fear and came with her daughter into
-another thick wood. The rays of the midday sun were so fierce that
-travellers had to sit in the shade. So Queen Moonlight and Princess
-Beauty sat down under an ashoka tree near a lotus-pond in terrible
-weariness and fear and grief.
-
-Now a gentleman named Fierce-lion who lived near came on horseback with
-his son into that wood to hunt. The son's name was Strong-lion. And the
-father saw the footprints of the queen and the princess, and he said
-to his son: "My son, these footprints are clean-cut and ladylike. Let
-us follow them. And if we find two women, you shall marry one of them,
-whichever you choose."
-
-And the son Strong-lion said: "Father, the one who has the little feet
-in this line of footprints, seems to be the wife for me. The one with
-the bigger feet must be older. She is the wife for you."
-
-But Fierce-lion said: "My son, what do you mean? Your mother went to
-heaven before your eyes. When so good a wife is gone, how could I think
-of another?"
-
-But his son said: "Not so, Father. A householder's house is an empty
-place without a wife. Besides, you have surely heard what the poet says:
-
- 'What fool would go into a house?
- 'Tis a prisoner's abode,
- Unless a buxom wife is there,
- Looking down the road.'
-
-So, Father, I beg you on my life to marry the second one, whom I have
-chosen for you."
-
-Then Fierce-lion said "Very well," and went on slowly with his son,
-following the footprints. And when he came to the pond, he saw Queen
-Moonlight, radiant with beauty and charm. And with his son he eagerly
-approached her. But when she saw him, she rose in terror, fearing that
-he was a robber.
-
-But her sensible daughter said: "There is no reason to fear. These two
-men are not robbers. They are two well-dressed gentlemen, who probably
-came here to hunt." Still the queen swung in doubt.
-
-Then Fierce-lion dismounted and stood before her. And he said:
-"Beautiful lady, do not be frightened. We came here to hunt. Pluck up
-heart and tell me without fear who you are. Why have you come into
-this lonely wood? For your appearance is that of ladies who wear gems
-and sit on pleasant balconies. And why should feet fit to saunter in
-a court, press this thorny ground? It is a strange sight. For the
-wind-blown dust settles on your faces and robs them of beauty. It hurts
-us to see the fierce rays of the sun fall upon such figures. Tell us
-your story. For our hearts are sadly grieved to see you in such a
-plight. And we cannot see how you could live in a forest filled with
-wild beasts."
-
-Then the queen sighed, and between shame and grief she stammered out
-her story. And Fierce-lion saw that she had no husband to care for her.
-So he comforted her and soothed her with tender words, and took care of
-her and her daughter. His son helped the two ladies on horseback and
-led them to his own city, rich as the city of the god of wealth. And
-the queen seemed to be in another life. She was helpless and widowed
-and miserable. So she consented. What could she do, poor woman?
-
-Then, because the queen had smaller feet, the son Strong-lion married
-Queen Moonlight. And Fierce-lion, the father, married her daughter, the
-princess Beauty, because of the bigness of her feet. Who would break a
-promise that had been made solemnly?
-
-Thus, because of their inconsistent feet, the daughter became the wife
-of the father and the mother-in-law of her own mother. And the mother
-became the wife of the son and the daughter-in-law of her own daughter.
-And as time passed, sons and daughters were born to each pair.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king: "O King,
-when children were born to the father and daughter, and other children
-to the son and mother, what relation were those children to one
-another? If you know and do not tell, then remember the curse I spoke
-of before."
-
-[Illustration: He comforted her and soothed her with tender words.]
-
-When the king heard the goblin's question, he turned the thing this way
-and that, but could not say a word. So he went on in silence. And when
-the goblin saw that he could not answer the question, he laughed in his
-heart and thought: "This king cannot give an answer to my Great Puzzle.
-So he just walks on in silence. And he cannot deceive me because of the
-power of the curse. Well, I am pleased with his wonderful character.
-So I will cheat that rogue of a monk, and give the magic power he is
-striving after to this king."
-
-So the goblin said aloud: "O King, you are weary with your comings
-and goings in this dreadful cemetery in the black night, yet you seem
-happy, and never hesitate at all. I am astonished and pleased at your
-perseverance. So now you may take the dead body and go ahead. I will
-leave the body. And I will tell you something that will do you good,
-and you must do it. The monk for whom you are carrying this body, is a
-rogue. He will call upon me and worship me, and he will try to kill you
-as a sacrifice. He will say: 'Lie flat on the ground in an attitude of
-reverence.' O King, you must say to that rascal: 'I do not know this
-attitude of reverence. Show me first, and then I will do likewise.'
-Then when he lies on the ground to show you the attitude of reverence,
-cut off his head with your sword. Then you will get the kingship over
-the fairies which he is trying to get. Otherwise, the monk will kill
-you and get the magic power. That is why I have delayed you so long.
-Now go ahead, and win magic power."
-
-So the goblin left the body on the king's shoulder and went away. And
-the king reflected how the monk Patience was planning to hurt him. He
-took the body and joyfully went to the fig-tree.
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUSION
-
-
-So King Triple-victory came to the monk Patience with the body on his
-shoulder. And he saw the monk alone in the dark night, sitting under
-the cemetery tree and looking down the road. He had made a magic circle
-with yellow powdered bones in a spot smeared with blood. In it he had
-put a jug filled with blood and lamps with magic oil. He had kindled a
-fire and brought together the things he needed for worship.
-
-The monk rose to greet the king who came carrying the body, and he
-said: "O King, you have done me a great favour, and a hard one. This is
-a strange business and a strange time and place for such as you. They
-say truly that you are the best of kings, for you serve others without
-thinking of yourself. This is the very thing that makes the greatness
-of a great man, when he does not give a thing up, though it costs his
-very life."
-
-So the monk felt sure that he was quite successful, and he took the
-body from the king's shoulder. He bathed it and put garlands on it,
-and set it in the middle of the circle. Then he smeared his own body
-with ashes, put on a cord made of human hair, wrapped himself in dead
-men's clothes, and stood a moment, deep in thought. And the goblin was
-attracted by his thought into the body, and the monk worshipped him.
-
-First he offered liquor in a skull, then he gave him human teeth
-carefully cleaned, and human eyes and flesh. So he completed his
-worship, then he said to the king: "O King, fall flat on the ground
-before this master magician in an attitude of reverence, so that he may
-give you what you want."
-
-And the king remembered the words of the goblin. He said to the monk:
-"Holy sir, I do not know that attitude of reverence. Do you show me
-first, and afterwards I will do it in the same way."
-
-And when the monk fell on the ground to show the attitude of reverence,
-the king cut off his head with a sword, and cut out his heart and split
-it open. And he gave the head and the heart to the goblin.
-
-Then all the little gods were delighted and cried: "Well done!" And the
-goblin was pleased and spoke to the king from the body he was living
-in: "O King, this monk was trying to become king of the fairies. But
-you shall be that when you have been king of the whole world."
-
-And the king answered the goblin: "O magic creature, if you are pleased
-with me, I have nothing more to wish for. Yet I ask you to make me one
-promise, that these twenty-two different, charming puzzle-stories shall
-be known all over the world and be received with honour."
-
-And the goblin answered: "O King, so be it. And I will tell you
-something more. Listen. When anyone tells or hears with proper respect
-even a part of these puzzle-stories, he shall be immediately free from
-sin. And wherever these stories are told, elves and giants and witches
-and goblins and imps shall have no power."
-
-Then the goblin left the dead body by magic, and went where he wanted
-to. Then Shiva appeared there with all the little gods, and he was
-well pleased. When the king bowed before him, he said: "My son, you
-did well to kill this sham monk who tried by force to become king of
-the fairies. Therefore you shall establish the whole earth, and then
-become king of the fairies yourself. And when you have long enjoyed
-the delights of heaven and at last give them up of your own accord,
-then you shall be united with me. So receive from me this sword called
-Invincible. While you have it, everything you say will come true."
-
-So Shiva gave him the magic sword, received his flowery words of
-worship, and vanished with the gods.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
-Minor punctuation and printer errors repaired.
-
-Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully
-as possible, including obsolete and variant spellings and other
-inconsistencies.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Twenty-Two Goblins, by Arthur W. Ryder
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Twenty-Two Goblins, by Arthur W. Ryder
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Twenty-Two Goblins
- Translated from the Sanskrit
-
-Author: Arthur W. Ryder
-
-Illustrator: Perham W. Nahl
-
-Translator: Arthur W. Ryder
-
-Release Date: June 11, 2016 [EBook #52309]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charlene Taylor, Christopher Wright and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_001-274.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="half-title">TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Frontispiece" id="Frontispiece">[Frontispiece]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="mb4 ph3"><em>All rights reserved</em></p>
-
-<div class="break-before figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_007.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Love-cluster ... stood at her lattice window.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="break-before">
- <h1><em>TWENTY-TWO
- GOBLINS</em></h1>
-
- <p class="ph3">TRANSLATED FROM THE SANSKRIT</p>
- <p class="ph4">BY</p>
- <p class="ph2">ARTHUR W. RYDER</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/title_page_illo.jpg" alt="" />
- </div>
-
- <p class="ph4">WITH TWENTY<br />
- ILLUSTRATIONS IN<br />
- COLOUR BY<br />
- <span class="ph3">PERHAM W. NAHL</span></p>
-
-
- <p class="mt2 ph3">LONDON &amp; TORONTO<br />
- J. M. DENT &amp; SONS LTD.<br />
- NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON &amp; CO.<br />
- MCMXVII</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="mt4 ph5">
-<em>Printed in Great Britain<br />
-by Turnbull &amp; Spears, Edinburgh</em></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
- <th class="rom">&nbsp;</th>
- <th class="cht">&nbsp;</th>
- <th class="pag"><em>Page</em></th>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>Introduction</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <th class="rom"><em>Goblin-<br />story</em></th>
- <th class="cht">&nbsp;</th>
- <th class="pag">&nbsp;</th>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">1.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Prince's Elopement. Whose fault was the resulting death of his parents-in-law?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">2.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Three Lovers who brought the Dead Girl to Life. Whose wife should she be?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">3.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Parrot and the Thrush. Which are worse, men or women?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">4.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>King Shudraka and Hero's Family. Which of the five deserves the most honour?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">5.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Brave Man, the Wise Man, and the Clever Man. To which should the girl be given?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">6.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Girl who transposed the Heads of her Husband and Brother. Which combination of head and body is her husband?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">7.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Mutual Services of King Fierce-lion and Prince Good. Which is the more deserving?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">8.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Specialist in Food, the Specialist in Women, and the Specialist in Cotton. Which is the cleverest?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">9.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Four Scientific Suitors. To which should the girl be given?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">10.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Three Delicate Wives of King Virtue-banner. Which is the most delicate?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">11.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The King who won a Fairy as his Wife. Why <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span>did his counsellor's heart break?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">12.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Brahman who died because Poison from a Snake in the Claws of a Hawk fell into a Dish of Food given him by a Charitable Woman. Who is to blame for his death?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">13.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Girl who showed Great Devotion to the Thief. Did he weep or laugh?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">14.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Man who changed into a Woman at Will. Was his wife his or the other man's?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">15.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Fairy Prince Cloud-chariot and the Serpent Shell-crest. Which is the more self-sacrificing?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">16.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The King who died for Love of his General's Wife; the General follows him in Death. Which is the more worthy?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">17.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Youth who went through the Proper Ceremonies. Why did he fail to win the magic spell?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">18.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Boy whom his Parents, the King, and the Giant conspired to Kill. Why did he laugh at the moment of death?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">19.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Man, his Wife, and her Lover, who all died for Love. Which was the most foolish?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">20.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Four Brothers who brought a Dead Lion to Life. Which is to blame when he kills them all?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">21.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Old Hermit who exchanged his Body for that of the Dead Boy. Why did he weep and dance?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">22.</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>The Father and Son who married Daughter and Mother. What relation were their children?</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="rom">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="cht"><em>Conclusion</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-<table class="toc" summary="Illustrations">
-<tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>Love-cluster ... stood at her lattice window</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Frontispiece"><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <th class="cht">&nbsp;</th>
- <th class="pag"><em>facing page</em></th>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>They took her body to the cemetery and burned it</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>The thrush suddenly became a goddess</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>Trusty worshipped the goddess and bravely saluted her</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>The giant came out in anger and the brave man fought with him</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>"Do nothing rash, my daughter, leave the rope alone"</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>Good sank into the ocean, and when he looked about he saw a wonderful city</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>The brothers went to the ocean, and there they found a turtle</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>"I understand the cries of all beasts and birds"</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>She gradually recovered consciousness</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>When he saw that she was saved, the king cried, "Come, come to me!"</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>The summer came on him like a lion</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>With a turn of the wrist he sent the dagger flying from the chief's hand</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>An elephant came by, crushing the people in his path</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>He climbed the rock of sacrifice, eager to give his life for another</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_148">148</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>"Shall I go into the fire or go home?"</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>The giant laughed aloud, spit fire in his wrath, and showed his dreadful fangs</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>A merchant named Fortune richer than the god of wealth</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>The lion arose and killed his four creators</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><em>He comforted her and soothed her with tender words</em></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_014.jpg" alt="" />
- <p class="caption">TWENTY-TWO GOBLINS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">On</span> the bank of the Godavari River is a
-kingdom called the Abiding Kingdom.
-There lived the son of King Victory,
-the famous King Triple-victory, mighty as the
-king of the gods. As this king sat in judgment,
-a monk called Patience brought him every day
-one piece of fruit as an expression of homage.
-And the king took it and gave it each day to
-the treasurer who stood near. Thus twelve
-years passed.</p>
-
-<p>Now one day the monk came to court, gave
-the king a piece of fruit as usual, and went away.
-But on this day the king gave the fruit to a
-pet baby monkey that had escaped from his
-keepers, and happened to wander in. And as
-the monkey ate the fruit, he split it open, and a
-priceless, magnificent gem came out.</p>
-
-<p>When the king saw this, he took it and asked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-the treasurer: "Where have you been keeping
-the fruits which the monk brought? I gave
-them to you." When the treasurer heard this,
-he was frightened and said: "Your Majesty, I
-have thrown them all through the window. If
-your Majesty desires, I will look for them
-now." And when the king had dismissed him,
-he went, but returned in a moment, and said
-again: "Your Majesty, they were all smashed
-in the treasury, and in them I see heaps of
-dazzling gems."</p>
-
-<p>When he heard this, the king was delighted,
-and gave the jewels to the treasurer. And when
-the monk came the next day, he asked him:
-"Monk, why do you keep honouring me in
-such an expensive way? Unless I know the
-reason, I will not take your fruit."</p>
-
-<p>Then the monk took the king aside and
-said: "O hero, there is a business in which I
-need help. So I ask for your help in it, because
-you are a brave man." And the king promised
-his assistance.</p>
-
-<p>Then the monk was pleased, and said again:
-"O King, on the last night of the waning moon,
-you must go to the great cemetery at nightfall,
-and come to me under the fig-tree." Then the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-king said "Certainly," and Patience, the monk,
-went home well pleased.</p>
-
-<p>So when the night came, the mighty king
-remembered his promise to the monk, and at
-dusk he wrapped his head in a black veil,
-took his sword in his hand, and went to the
-great cemetery without being seen. When
-he got there, he looked about, and saw the
-monk standing under the fig-tree and making
-a magic circle. So he went up and said:
-"Monk, here I am. Tell me what I am to
-do for you."</p>
-
-<p>And when the monk saw the king, he was
-delighted and said: "O King, if you wish to
-do me a favour, go south from here some
-distance all alone, and you will see a sissoo
-tree and a dead body hanging from it. Be
-so kind as to bring that here."</p>
-
-<p>When the brave king heard this, he agreed,
-and, true to his promise, turned south and
-started. And as he walked with difficulty
-along the cemetery road, he came upon the
-sissoo tree at some distance, and saw a body
-hanging on it. So he climbed the tree, cut
-the rope, and let it fall to the ground. And
-as it fell, it unexpectedly cried aloud, as if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-alive. Then the king climbed down, and
-thinking it was alive, he mercifully rubbed
-its limbs. Then the body gave a loud laugh.</p>
-
-<p>So the king knew that a goblin lived in it,
-and said without fear: "What are you laughing
-about? Come, let us be off." But then
-he did not see the goblin on the ground any
-longer. And when he looked up, there he
-was, hanging in the tree as before. So the
-king climbed the tree again, and carefully
-carried the body down. A brave man's heart
-is harder than a diamond, and nothing makes
-it tremble.</p>
-
-<p>Then he put the body with the goblin in
-it on his shoulder, and started off in silence.
-And as he walked along, the goblin in the
-body said: "O King, to amuse the journey,
-I will tell you a story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>FIRST GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Prince's Elopement. Whose fault was the
-resulting death of his parents-in-law?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">There</span> is a city called Benares
-where Shiva lives. It is loved by
-pious people like the soil of Mount
-Kailasa. The river of heaven shines there
-like a pearl necklace. And in the city lived
-a king called Valour who burned up all his
-enemies by his valour, as a fire burns a forest.
-He had a son named Thunderbolt who broke
-the pride of the love-god by his beauty, and
-the pride of men by his bravery. This prince
-had a clever friend, the son of a counsellor.</p>
-
-<p>One day the prince was enjoying himself
-with his friend hunting, and went a long
-distance. And so he came to a great forest.
-There he saw a beautiful lake, and being tired,
-he drank from it with his friend the counsellor's
-son, washed his hands and feet, and
-sat down under a tree on the bank.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And then he saw a beautiful maiden who
-had come there with her servants to bathe.
-She seemed to fill the lake with the stream
-of her beauty, and seemed to make lilies grow
-there with her eyes, and seemed to shame the
-lotuses with a face more lovely than the moon.
-She captured the prince's heart the moment
-that he saw her. And the prince took her
-eyes captive.</p>
-
-<p>The girl had a strange feeling when she saw
-him, but was too modest to say a word. So
-she gave a hint of the feeling in her heart.
-She put a lotus on her ear, laid a lily on her
-head after she had made the edge look like
-a row of teeth, and placed her hand on her
-heart. But the prince did not understand her
-signs, only the clever counsellor's son understood
-them all.</p>
-
-<p>A moment later the girl went away, led by
-her servants. She went home and sat on the
-sofa and stayed there. But her thoughts were
-with the prince.</p>
-
-<p>The prince went slowly back to his city,
-and was terribly lonely without her, and grew
-thinner every day. Then his friend the son
-of the counsellor took him aside and told him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-that she was not hard to find. But he had
-lost all courage and said: "My friend, I don't
-know her name, nor her home, nor her family.
-How can I find her? Why do you vainly
-try to comfort me?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor's son said: "Did you
-not see all that she hinted with her signs?
-When she put the lotus on her ear, she meant
-that she lived in the kingdom of a king named
-Ear-lotus. And when she made the row of
-teeth, she meant that she was the daughter of
-a man named Bite there. And when she laid
-the lily on her head, she meant that her name
-was Lily. And when she placed her hand on
-her heart, she meant that she loved you. And
-there is a king named Ear-lotus in the Kalinga
-country. There is a very rich man there
-whom the king likes. His real name is
-Battler, but they call him Bite. He has a
-pearl of a girl whom he loves more than his
-life, and her name is Lily. This is true,
-because people told me. So I understood her
-signs about her country and the other things."
-When the counsellor's son had said this, the
-prince was delighted to find him so clever,
-and pleased because he knew what to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then he formed a plan with the counsellor's
-son, and started for the lake again, pretending
-that he was going to hunt, but really to find
-the girl that he loved. On the way he rode
-like the wind away from his soldiers, and
-started for the Kalinga country with the
-counsellor's son.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the city of King Ear-lotus,
-they looked about and found the house
-of the man called Bite, and they went to a
-house near by to live with an old woman.
-And the counsellor's son said to the old
-woman: "Old woman, do you know anybody
-named Bite in this city?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the old woman answered him respectfully:
-"My son, I know him well. I was
-his nurse. And I am a servant of his daughter
-Lily. But I do not go there now because my
-dress is stolen. My naughty son is a gambler
-and steals my clothes."</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor's son was pleased and
-satisfied her with his own cloak and other
-presents. And he said: "Mother, you must
-do very secretly what we tell you. Go to
-Bite's daughter Lily, and tell her that the
-prince whom she saw on the bank of the lake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-is here, and sent you with a love-message
-to her."</p>
-
-<p>The old woman was pleased with the gifts
-and went to Lily at once. And when she got
-a chance, she said: "My child, the prince and
-the counsellor's son have come to take you.
-Tell me what to do now." But the girl
-scolded her and struck her cheeks with both
-hands smeared with camphor.</p>
-
-<p>The old woman was hurt by this treatment,
-and came home weeping, and said to the two
-men: "My sons, see how she left the marks
-of her fingers on my face."</p>
-
-<p>And the prince was hopeless and sad, but
-the very clever counsellor's son took him aside
-and said: "My friend, do not be sad. She
-was only keeping the secret when she scolded
-the old woman, and put ten fingers white with
-camphor on her face. She meant that you
-must wait before seeing her, for the next ten
-nights are bright with moonlight."</p>
-
-<p>So the counsellor's son comforted the prince,
-took a little gold ornament and sold it in the
-market, and bought a great dinner for the old
-woman. So they two took dinner with the
-old woman. They did this for ten days, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-then the counsellor's son sent her to Lily again,
-to find out something more.</p>
-
-<p>And the old woman was eager for dainty
-food and drink. So to please him she went
-to Lily's house, and then came back and said:
-"My children, I went there and stayed with
-her for some time without speaking. But she
-spoke herself of my naughtiness in mentioning
-you, and struck me again on the chest with
-three fingers stained red. So I came back in
-disgrace."</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor's son whispered to the
-prince: "Don't be alarmed, my friend. When
-she left the marks of three red fingers on the
-old woman's heart, she meant to say very
-cleverly that there were three dangerous days
-coming." So the counsellor's son comforted the
-prince.</p>
-
-<p>And when three days were gone, he sent
-the old woman to Lily again. And this time
-she went and was very respectfully entertained,
-and treated to wine and other things the whole
-day. But when she was ready to go back in
-the evening, a terrible shouting was heard
-outside. They heard people running and
-crying: "Oh, oh! A mad elephant has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-escaped from his stable and is running around
-and stamping on people."</p>
-
-<p>Then Lily said to the old woman: "Mother,
-you must not go through the street now where
-the elephant is. I will put you in a swing
-and let you down with ropes through this
-great window into the garden. Then you
-can climb into a tree and jump on the wall,
-and go home by way of another tree." So she
-had her servants let the old woman down from
-the window into the garden by a rope-swing.
-And the old woman went home and told the
-prince and the counsellor's son all about it.</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor's son said to the prince:
-"My friend, your wishes are fulfilled. She
-has been clever enough to show you the road.
-So you must follow that same road this very
-evening to the room of your darling."</p>
-
-<p>So the prince went to the garden with the
-counsellor's son by the road that the old
-woman had shown them. And there he saw
-the rope-swing hanging down, and servants
-above keeping an eye on the road. And when
-he got into the swing, the servants at the
-window pulled at the rope and he came to his
-darling. And when he had gone in, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-counsellor's son went back to the old woman's
-house.</p>
-
-<p>But the prince saw Lily, and her face was
-beautiful like the full moon, and the moonlight
-of her beauty shone forth, like the night when
-the moon shines in secret because of the dark.
-And when she saw him, she threw her arms
-around his neck and kissed him. So he married
-her and stayed hidden with her for some days.</p>
-
-<p>One day he said to his wife: "My dear,
-my friend the counsellor's son came with me,
-and he is staying all alone at the old woman's
-house. I must go and see him, then I will
-come back."</p>
-
-<p>But Lily was shrewd and said: "My dear,
-I must ask you something. Did you understand
-the signs I made, or was it the counsellor's
-son?" And the prince said to her: "My
-dear, I did not understand them all, but my
-friend has wonderful wisdom. He understood
-everything and told me." Then the sweet
-girl thought, and said: "My dear, you did
-wrong not to tell me before. Your friend is
-a real brother to me. I ought to have sent
-him some nuts and other nice things at the
-very first."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then she let him go, and he went to his
-friend by night by the same road, and told all
-that his wife had said. But the counsellor's
-son said: "That is foolish," and did not think
-much of it. So they spent the night talking.</p>
-
-<p>Then when the time for the twilight sacrifice
-came, a friend of Lily's came there with cooked
-rice and nuts in her hand. She came and
-asked the counsellor's son about his health and
-gave him the present. And she cleverly tried
-to keep the prince from eating. "Your wife
-is expecting you to dinner," she said, and a
-moment later she went away.</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor's son said to the prince:
-"Look, your Majesty. I will show you something
-curious." So he took a little of the
-cooked rice and gave it to a dog that was there.
-And the moment he ate it, the dog died. And
-the prince asked the counsellor's son what this
-strange thing could mean.</p>
-
-<p>And he replied: "Your Majesty, she knew
-that I was clever because I understood her
-signs, and she wanted to kill me out of love
-for you. For she thought the prince would
-not be all her own while I was alive, but
-would leave her for my sake and go back to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-his own city. So she sent me poisoned food
-to eat. But you must not be angry with her.
-I will think up some scheme."</p>
-
-<p>Then the prince praised the counsellor's
-son, and said: "You are truly the body
-of wisdom." And then suddenly a great
-wailing of grief-stricken people was heard:
-"Alas! Alas! The king's little son is dead."</p>
-
-<p>When he heard this, the counsellor's son
-was delighted, and said: "Your Majesty, go
-to-night to Lily's house, and make her drink
-wine until she loses her senses and seems to be
-dead. Then as she lies there, make a mark on
-her hip with a red-hot fork, steal her jewels,
-and come back the old way through the window.
-After that I will do the right thing."</p>
-
-<p>Then he made a three-pronged fork and
-gave it to the prince. And the prince took
-the crooked, cruel thing, hard as the weapon
-of Death, and went by night as before to
-Lily's house. "A king," he thought, "ought
-not to disregard the words of a high-minded
-counsellor." So when he had stupefied her
-with wine, he branded her hip with the fork,
-stole her jewels, returned to his friend, and told
-him everything, showing him the jewels.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor's son felt sure that his
-scheme was successful. He went to the
-cemetery in the morning, and disguised himself
-as a hermit, and the prince as his pupil.
-And he said: "Take this pearl necklace from
-among the jewels. Go and sell it in the
-market-place. And if the policemen arrest
-you, say this: 'It was given to me to sell by
-my teacher.'"</p>
-
-<p>So the prince went to the market-place and
-stood there offering the pearl necklace for
-sale, and he was arrested while doing it by
-the policemen. And as they were eager to
-find out about the theft of the jewels from
-Bite's daughter, they took the prince at once
-to the chief of police. And when he saw
-that the culprit was dressed like a hermit, he
-asked him very gently: "Holy sir, where did
-you get this pearl necklace? It belongs to
-Bite's daughter and was stolen." Then the
-prince said to them: "Gentlemen, my teacher
-gave it to me to sell. You had better go and
-ask him."</p>
-
-<p>Then the chief of police went and asked
-him: "Holy sir, how did this pearl necklace
-come into your pupil's hand?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And the shrewd counsellor's son whispered
-to him: "Sir, as I am a hermit, I wander
-about all the time in this region. And as I
-happened to be here in this cemetery, I saw
-a whole company of witches who came here
-at night. And one of the witches split open
-the heart of a king's son, and offered it to
-her master. She was mad with wine, and
-screwed up her face most horribly. But when
-she impudently tried to snatch my rosary as
-I prayed, I became angry, and branded her
-on the hip with a three-pronged fork which
-I had made red-hot with a magic spell. And
-I took this pearl necklace from her neck.
-Then, as it was not a thing for a hermit, I
-sent it to be sold."</p>
-
-<p>When he heard this, the chief of police
-went and told the whole story to the king.
-And when the king heard and saw the evidence,
-he sent the old woman, who was reliable, to
-identify the pearl necklace. And he heard
-from her that Lily was branded on the hip.</p>
-
-<p>Then he was convinced that she was really
-a witch and had devoured his son. So he
-went himself to the counsellor's son, who was
-disguised as a hermit, and asked how Lily
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>should be punished. And by his advice, she
-was banished from the city, though her parents
-wept. So she was banished naked to the
-forest and knew that the counsellor's son had
-done it all, but she did not die.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_031.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">They took her body to the cemetery and burned it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And at nightfall the prince and the counsellor's
-son put off their hermit disguise, mounted
-on horseback, and found her weeping. They
-put her on a horse and took her to their own
-country. And when they got there, the
-prince lived most happily with her.</p>
-
-<p>But Bite thought that his daughter was eaten
-by wild beasts in the wood, and he died of
-grief. And his wife died with him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When he had told this story, the goblin asked
-the king: "O King, who was to blame for
-the death of the parents: the prince, or the
-counsellor's son, or Lily? You seem like a
-very wise man, so resolve my doubts on this
-point. If you know and do not tell me the
-truth, then your head will surely fly into a
-hundred pieces. And if you give a good
-answer, then I will jump from your shoulder
-and go back to the sissoo tree."</p>
-
-<p>Then King Triple-victory said to the goblin:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-"You are a master of magic. You surely
-know yourself, but I will tell you. It was
-not the fault of any of the three you
-mentioned. It was entirely the fault of King
-Ear-lotus."</p>
-
-<p>But the goblin said: "How could it be
-the king's fault? The other three did it.
-Are the crows to blame when the geese eat
-up the rice?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the king said: "But those three are
-not to blame. It was right for the counsellor's
-son to do his master's business. So he is not
-to blame. And Lily and the prince were
-madly in love and could not stop to think.
-They only looked after their own affairs.
-They are not to blame.</p>
-
-<p>"But the king knew the law-books very
-well, and he had spies to find out the facts
-among the people. And he knew about the
-doings of rascals. So he acted without thinking.
-He is to blame."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he wanted to
-test the king's constancy. So he went back
-by magic in a moment to the sissoo tree.
-And the king went back fearlessly to get him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>SECOND GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Three Lovers who brought the Dead Girl
-to Life. Whose wife should she be?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> King Triple-victory went back
-under the sissoo tree to fetch the
-goblin. And when he got there and
-looked about, he saw the goblin fallen on the
-ground and moaning. Then, when the king
-put the body with the goblin in it on his
-shoulder and started to carry him off quickly
-and silently, the goblin on his shoulder said to
-him: "O King, you have fallen into a very
-disagreeable task which you do not deserve.
-So to amuse you I will tell another story.
-Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the bank of the Kalindi River is a farm
-where a very learned Brahman lived. And
-he had a very beautiful daughter named Coral.
-When the Creator fashioned her fresh and
-peerless loveliness, surely he must have despised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-the cleverness he showed before in fashioning
-the nymphs of heaven.</p>
-
-<p>When she had grown out of childhood, there
-came from the city of Kanauj three Brahman
-youths, endowed with all the virtues. And
-each of them asked her father for her, that she
-might be his own. And though her father
-would rather have died than give her up to
-anyone, he made up his mind to give her to
-one of them. But the girl would not marry
-any one of them for some time, because she
-was afraid of hurting the feelings of the other
-two. So they stayed there all three of them
-day and night, feasting on the beauty of her
-face, like the birds that live on moonbeams.</p>
-
-<p>Then all at once Coral fell sick of a burning
-fever and died. And when the Brahman
-youths saw that she was dead, they were
-smitten with grief. But they adorned her
-body, took it to the cemetery, and burned it.</p>
-
-<p>And one of them built a hut there, slept on
-a bed made of her ashes, and got his food by
-begging. The second took her bones and went
-to dip them in the sacred Ganges river. And
-the third became a monk and wandered in
-other countries.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And as he wandered, the monk came to a
-village called Thunderbolt, and was entertained
-in the house of a Brahman. But when he had
-been honoured by the master of the house and
-had begun to eat dinner there, the little boy
-began to cry and would not stop even when
-they petted him. So his mother took him on
-her arm, and angrily threw him into the blazing
-fire. And being tender, he was reduced to
-ashes in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>When the monk saw this, his hair stood on
-end, and he said: "Alas! I have come into the
-house of a devil. I will not eat this food. It
-would be like eating sin." But the master of
-the house said to him: "Brahman, I have
-studied to good purpose. See my skill in bringing
-the dead to life." So he opened a book,
-took out a magic spell, read it, and sprinkled
-water on the ashes. And the moment the
-water was sprinkled, the boy stood up alive
-just as before. Then the monk was highly
-delighted and finished his dinner with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>And the master of the house hung the book
-on an ivory peg, took dinner with the monk,
-and went to bed. When he was asleep, the
-monk got up quietly, and tremblingly took the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-book, hoping to bring his darling Coral back to
-life. He went away and travelled night and
-day, until he finally reached the cemetery.
-And he caught sight of the second youth, who
-had come back after dipping the bones in the
-Ganges. And he also found the third youth,
-who had made a hut and lived there, sleeping
-on the girl's ashes.</p>
-
-<p>Then the monk cried: "Brother, leave your
-hut. I will bring the dear girl back to life."
-And while they eagerly questioned him, he
-opened the book, and read the magic spell, and
-sprinkled holy water on the ashes. And Coral
-immediately stood up, alive. And the girl was
-more beautiful than ever. She looked as if
-she were made of gold.</p>
-
-<p>When the three youths saw her come back
-to life like that, they went mad with love,
-and fought with one another to possess her.</p>
-
-<p>One said: "I brought her to life by my
-magic spell. She is my wife."</p>
-
-<p>The second said: "She came to life because
-of my journey to the sacred river. She is my
-wife."</p>
-
-<p>The third said: "I kept her ashes. That
-is why she came to life. She is my dear wife."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>O King, you are able to decide their dispute.
-Tell me. Whose wife should she be? If you
-know and say what is false, then your head
-will split.</p>
-
-<p>When the king heard this, he said to the
-goblin: "The man who painfully found the
-magic spell and brought her back to life, he
-did only what a father ought to do. He is
-not her husband. And the man who went to
-dip her bones in the sacred river, he did only
-what a son ought to do. He is not her
-husband. But the man who slept with her
-ashes and lived a hard life in the cemetery, he
-did what a lover ought to do. He deserves to
-be her husband."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this answer of King
-Triple-victory, he suddenly escaped from his
-shoulder and went back. And the king wished
-to do as the monk had asked him; so he
-decided to go back and get him. Great-minded
-people do not waver until they have
-kept their promises, even at the cost of life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>THIRD GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Parrot and the Thrush. Which are
-worse, men or women?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the
-sissoo tree to fetch the goblin. When
-he got there, he took the body with
-the goblin in it on his shoulder, and started off
-in silence. And as he walked along, the
-goblin said to him again: "O King, you must
-be very tired, coming and going in the night.
-So to amuse you I will tell another story.
-Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Patna, the gem of the
-earth. And long ago a king lived there whose
-name was Lion-of-Victory. Fate had made
-him the owner of all virtues and all wealth.
-And he had a parrot called Jewel-of-Wisdom,
-that had divine intelligence and knew all the
-sciences, but lived as a parrot because of a curse.</p>
-
-<p>This king had a son called Moon, and by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-the advice of the parrot this prince married the
-daughter of the king of the Magadha country;
-and her name was Moonlight. Now this
-princess had a thrush named Moony, who was
-like the parrot, because she had learning and
-intelligence. And the parrot and the thrush
-lived in one cage in the palace.</p>
-
-<p>One day the parrot eagerly said to the
-thrush: "My darling, love me, and share my
-bed and my chair and my food and my
-amusements."</p>
-
-<p>But the thrush said: "I will have nothing
-to do with men. Men are bad and ungrateful."</p>
-
-<p>Then the parrot said: "Men are not bad.
-It is only women who are bad and cruel-hearted."
-And they quarrelled.</p>
-
-<p>Then the two birds wagered their freedom
-with each other and went to the prince to have
-their quarrel decided. And the prince mounted
-his father's judgment throne, and when he had
-heard the cause of the quarrel, he asked the
-thrush: "How are men ungrateful? Tell the
-truth." Then she said, "Listen, O Prince,"
-and to prove her point she started to tell this
-story illustrating the faults of men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There is a famous city called Kamandaki,
-where a wealthy merchant lived named
-Fortune. And in time a son was born to
-him and named Treasure. Then when the
-father went to heaven, the young man became
-very unruly because of gambling and other
-vices. And the rascals came together, and
-ruined him. Association with scoundrels is
-the root from which springs the tree of
-calamity.</p>
-
-<p>So in no long time he lost all he had through
-his vices, and being ashamed of his poverty, he
-left his own country and went to wander in
-other places. And during his travels he came
-to a city called Sandal City, and entered the
-house of a merchant, seeking something to
-eat. When the merchant saw the youth, he
-asked him about his family, and finding that
-he was a gentleman, he entertained him. And
-thinking that Fate had sent the young man,
-he gave him his own daughter Pearl, together
-with some money. And when Treasure was
-married, he lived in his father-in-law's house.</p>
-
-<p>As time passed, he forgot his former miseries
-in the comforts of his life, and longed for the
-old vices, and wanted to go home. So the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-rascal managed to persuade his father-in-law,
-who had no other children, took his wife
-Pearl with her beautiful ornaments, and an old
-woman, and started for his own country.
-Presently he came to a wood where he said
-he was afraid of thieves, so he took all his
-wife's ornaments. Perceive, O Prince, how
-cruel and hard are the ungrateful hearts of
-those who indulge in gambling and other vices.
-And the scoundrel was ready, just for money,
-to kill his good wife. He threw her and the
-old woman into a pit. Then the rascal went
-away and the old woman perished there.</p>
-
-<p>But Pearl, with the little life she had left,
-managed to get out by clinging to the grass
-and bushes, and weeping bitterly, and bleeding,
-she asked the way step by step, and painfully
-reached her father's house by the way she had
-come. And her mother and father were surprised
-and asked her: "Why did you come
-back so soon, and in this condition?"</p>
-
-<p>And that good wife said: "On the road
-we were robbed, and my husband was forcibly
-carried off. And the old woman fell into a
-pit and died, but I escaped. And a kind-hearted
-traveller pulled me from the pit."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-Then her father and mother were saddened,
-but they comforted her, and Pearl stayed
-there, true to her husband.</p>
-
-<p>Then in time Treasure lost all his money in
-gambling, and he reflected: "I will get more
-money from the house of my father-in-law.
-I will go there and tell my father-in-law that
-his daughter is well and is at my house."</p>
-
-<p>So he went again to his father-in-law.
-And as he went, his ever-faithful wife saw
-him afar off. She ran and fell at the rascal's
-feet and told him all the story that she had
-invented for her parents. For the heart of a
-faithful wife does not change even when she
-learns that her husband is a rogue.</p>
-
-<p>Then that rascal went without fear into the
-house of his father-in-law and bowed low
-before his feet. And his father-in-law rejoiced
-when he saw him and made a great
-feast with his relatives, for he said: "My
-son is delivered alive from the robbers.
-Heaven be praised!" Then Treasure enjoyed
-the wealth of his father-in-law and lived with
-his wife Pearl.</p>
-
-<p>Now one night this worst of scoundrels did
-what I ought not to repeat, but I will tell it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-or my story would be spoiled. Listen, O
-Prince. While Pearl lay asleep trusting him,
-that wretch killed her in the night, stole all
-her jewels, and escaped to his own country.
-This shows how bad and ungrateful men are.</p>
-
-<p>When the thrush had told her story, the
-prince smiled and said to the parrot: "It is
-your turn now."</p>
-
-<p>Then the parrot said: "Your Majesty,
-women are cruel and reckless and bad. To
-prove it, I will tell a story. Listen."</p>
-
-<p>There is a city called Joyful, where lived a
-prince of merchants named Virtue, who owned
-millions of money. He had a daughter
-named Fortune, peerless in beauty, dearer to
-him than life. And she was given in marriage
-to a merchant's son from Copper City, whose
-name was Ocean. He was her equal in
-wealth, beauty, and family; a delight to the
-eyes of men.</p>
-
-<p>One day when her husband was away from
-home, she saw from the window a handsome
-young man. And the moment she saw him,
-the fickle girl went mad with love, and secretly
-sent a messenger to invite him in, and made
-love to him in secret. Thus her heart was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-fixed on him alone, and she was happy with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>But at last her husband came home and
-delighted the hearts of his parents-in-law.
-And when the day had been spent in feasting,
-Fortune was adorned by her mother, and
-sent to her husband's room. But she was
-cold toward him and pretended to sleep. And
-her husband went to sleep, too, for he was
-weary with his journey, and had been drinking
-wine.</p>
-
-<p>When everyone in the house had gone to
-sleep after their dinner, a thief made a hole in
-the wall and came into that very room. And
-just then the merchant's daughter got up without
-seeing him, and went out secretly to a
-meeting with her lover. And the thief was
-disappointed, and thought: "She has gone out
-into the night wearing the very jewels that I
-came to steal. I must see where she goes."
-So the thief went out and followed her.</p>
-
-<p>But she met a woman friend who had
-flowers in her hand, and went to a park not
-very far away. And there she saw the man
-whom she came to meet hanging on a tree.
-For the policeman had thought he was a thief,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-had put a rope around his neck and hanged
-him.</p>
-
-<p>And at the sight she went distracted, and
-lamented pitifully: "Oh, oh! I am undone,"
-and fell on the ground and wept. Then she
-took her lover down from the tree and made
-him sit up, though he was dead, and adorned
-him with perfumes and jewels and flowers.</p>
-
-<p>But when in her love-madness she lifted his
-face and kissed him, a goblin who had come
-to live in her dead lover, bit off her nose.
-And she was startled and ran in pain from
-the spot. But then she came back to see if
-perhaps he was alive after all. But the goblin
-had gone, and she saw that he was motionless
-and dead. So she slowly went back home,
-frightened and disgraced and weeping.</p>
-
-<p>And the concealed thief saw it all and
-thought: "What has the wicked woman
-done? Alas! Can women be so dreadful
-as this? What might she not do next?"
-So out of curiosity the thief still followed her
-from afar.</p>
-
-<p>And the wretched woman entered the house
-and cried aloud, and said: "Save me from my
-cruel enemy, my own husband. He cut off
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>my nose and I had done nothing." And her
-servants heard her cries and all arose in excitement.
-Her husband too awoke. Then her
-father came and saw that her nose was cut
-off, and in his anger he had his son-in-law
-arrested.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_048.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The thrush suddenly became a goddess.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And the poor man did not know what to
-do. Even when he was being bound, he
-remained silent and said nothing. Then they
-all woke up and heard the story, but the thief
-who knew the whole truth, ran away. And
-when day came, the merchant's son was haled
-before the king by his father-in-law. And
-Fortune went there without her nose, and the
-king heard the whole story and condemned
-the merchant's son to death for mistreating
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p>So the innocent, bewildered man was led to
-the place of execution and the drums were
-beaten. Just then the thief came up and said
-to the king's men: "Why do you kill this
-man without any good reason? I know how
-the whole thing happened. Take me to the
-king, and I will tell all."</p>
-
-<p>So all the king's men took him to the king.
-And the thief told the king all the adventures<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-of the night, and said: "Your Majesty, if you
-cannot trust my word, you may find the nose
-at this moment between the teeth of the dead
-body."</p>
-
-<p>Then the king sent men to investigate, and
-when he found it was true, he released the
-merchant's son from the punishment of death.
-As for wretched Fortune, he cut off her ears,
-too, and banished her from the country. And
-he took from her father, the merchant, all his
-money, and made the thief the chief of police.
-He was pleased with him.</p>
-
-<p>O Prince, this shows how cruel and false
-women are by nature.</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke these words, the parrot changed
-into a god, for the curse was fulfilled, and
-went to heaven like a god. And the thrush
-suddenly became a goddess, for her curse was
-at an end, and flew up likewise to heaven. So
-their dispute was never settled at that court.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-asked the king: "O King, tell me. Are men
-bad, or women? If you know and do not
-tell, your head will fly to pieces." And when
-the king heard these words of the goblin on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-his shoulder, he said to that magic goblin:
-"O goblin! Here and there, now and then,
-there is an occasional bad man like that. But
-women are usually bad. We hear about
-many of them."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin disappeared from the king's
-shoulder as before. And the king tried again
-to catch him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>FOURTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>King Shudraka and Hero's Family. Which
-of the five deserves the most honour?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> King Triple-victory went back
-under the sissoo tree and caught the
-goblin, who gave a horse-laugh. But
-the king without fear put him on his shoulder
-as before and started toward the monk. And
-as he walked along, the goblin on his shoulder
-said to him again: "O King, why do you
-take such pains for that wretched monk?
-Have you no sense about this fruitless task?
-Well, after all, I like your devotion. So, to
-amuse the weary journey, I will tell you
-another story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Beautiful, and it
-deserves the name. There lived a king named
-Shudraka, of tremendous power and mighty
-courage. He was so used to victory that the
-fire of his courage was kept blazing by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-wind from the fans in the hands of the wives
-of his vanquished foes. Under his rule the
-earth was rich and always good, as in the
-days of old. And he was fond of brave
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Now one day a Brahman named Hero
-came from Malwa to pay his homage to this
-king. He had a wife named Virtue, a son
-named Trusty, and a daughter named Heroic.
-And he had just three servants, a dagger at
-his hip, a sword in his hand, and a shield in
-his other hand. These were all the servants
-he had when he asked the king for five
-hundred gold-pieces a day as his wages.</p>
-
-<p>And the king thought from his appearance
-that he was a remarkably brave man, so he
-gave him the wages he asked. But out of
-curiosity he put spies on his track, to learn
-what he did with all the money.</p>
-
-<p>Now Hero called on the king in the morning,
-and at noon he took his sword and stood
-at the palace gate and divided his daily salary.
-One hundred gold-pieces he gave to his wife
-for food and household expenses. And with
-another hundred he bought clothes and
-perfumes and nuts and such things. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-another hundred he devoted to the worship
-of Vishnu and Shiva, after taking the
-ceremonial bath. And the two hundred
-which were left he gave to Brahmans and
-the unhappy and the poor. This was the
-way he divided and spent the money every
-day. Then after he had sacrificed and eaten
-dinner, he stood every night alone at the
-palace gate with his sword and shield. All
-this King Shudraka learned from his spies
-and was greatly pleased and forbad the spies
-to follow him again. For he thought him a
-wonderful man, worthy of especial honour.</p>
-
-<p>Then one day a veil of clouds covered the
-sky and poured down rain in streams day and
-night, so that the highway was quite deserted.
-Only Hero was at his post as usual by the
-palace gate. And when the sun set and
-dreadful darkness was spread abroad and the
-rain fell in sheets, the king wished to test
-Hero's behaviour. So at night he climbed to
-the palace roof and cried: "Who is there
-at the gate?" And Hero answered: "I am
-here." And the king thought: "How steadfast
-this man Hero is, and how devoted to
-me! I must surely give him a greater post."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-And he descended from the roof and entered
-the palace and went to bed.</p>
-
-<p>The next night it rained again in sheets
-and the world was wrapped in the darkness
-of death. And again the king thought to
-test his behaviour, and climbing to the roof
-he called out toward the palace gate: "Who
-is there?" And when Hero said: "I am
-here, your Majesty," the king was greatly
-astonished.</p>
-
-<p>Just then he heard at a distance a sweet-voiced
-woman crying. And he thought:
-"Who is this who laments so piteously, as if
-in deep despair? In my kingdom there is no
-violence, no poor man and none distressed.
-Who can she be?" And being merciful, he
-called to Hero, who stood below: "Listen,
-Hero. A woman is weeping at some distance.
-Go and learn why she weeps and who she
-is." And Hero said "Certainly," arranged his
-dagger, took his sword in his hand, and started.
-He did not even think of the pelting hail, the
-flashing lightning, or the rain and darkness.
-And when the king saw him setting out alone
-in a night like that, he was filled with pity and
-curiosity, and descending from the palace roof,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-took his sword and followed all alone, without
-being seen.</p>
-
-<p>As Hero traced the sound of crying, he came
-to a beautiful lake outside the city, and there
-he saw a woman in the midst of the water,
-lamenting in these words: "Alas for you,
-brave and merciful and generous! How shall
-I live without you?"</p>
-
-<p>And Hero was amazed, and timidly asked
-her: "Who are you, and why do you weep?"
-And she replied: "O Hero, I am the Goddess
-of the Earth, and now my lord, this virtuous
-King Shudraka, is going to die in three days.
-How shall I find another such master? So I
-am distracted with grief, and I lament."</p>
-
-<p>When Hero heard this, he was frightened
-and said: "Goddess, is there any remedy for
-this, any way in which the king might be
-saved?" And the goddess answered: "There
-is just one remedy, my son, and it is
-in your hands." And Hero said: "Goddess,
-tell me quickly, that I may adopt it
-at once. What good would life be to us
-otherwise?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the goddess said: "My son, there is
-no other man devoted to his master as you are:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-so you may learn how to save him. There is
-a temple to the Dreadful Goddess built by that
-king near his palace. If you sacrifice your son
-to her at once, then the king will not die. He
-will live another hundred years. If you do it
-this very night, then the blessing will come,
-not otherwise."</p>
-
-<p>And Hero, the hero, replied: "Then I will
-go, Goddess, and do it this moment." And
-the Goddess of the Earth said: "Good fortune
-go with you," and she vanished. And the
-king, who had followed secretly, heard it all.
-So he still followed to find out how Hero
-would behave.</p>
-
-<p>But Hero went straight home, woke his
-wife Virtue, and told her all that the Goddess
-of the Earth had said. And his wife said:
-"My dear, if so much depends on it, wake
-the boy and tell him." Then Hero woke the
-little boy, told him all, and said: "My boy,
-if you are sacrificed to the Dreadful Goddess,
-our king will live. If not, he will die in three
-days."</p>
-
-<p>And the boy was true to his name. Without
-fear and without hesitation he said: "My
-dear father, I am a lucky boy if the king lives
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>at the cost of my life. Besides, that would
-pay for the food we have eaten. Why then
-delay? Take me quickly and sacrifice me to
-the goddess. May the king's evil fate be
-averted by my death!" And Hero was
-delighted and congratulated him, saying:
-"Well said! You are indeed my son."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_060.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Trusty worshipped the goddess and bravely saluted her.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So Hero's wife Virtue and his daughter
-Heroic went through the night with Hero and
-Trusty to the temple of the Dreadful Goddess.
-The king too followed them, disguised and
-unnoticed. Then the father took Trusty from
-his shoulder in the presence of the goddess.
-And Trusty worshipped the goddess, and
-bravely saluted her, and said: "O Goddess, by
-the sacrifice of my head may the king live
-another hundred years and rule a thornless
-kingdom."</p>
-
-<p>And as he prayed, Hero cut off his head
-and offered it to the Dreadful Goddess, saying:
-"May the king live at the cost of my son's
-life!" Then a voice cried from heaven: "O
-Hero, who else is devoted to his master as you
-are? You have given life and royal power to
-the king at the cost of your only son, and such
-a son." All this the king himself saw and heard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then Hero's daughter Heroic kissed the lips
-of her dead brother, and was blinded with
-sorrow, and her heart broke, and she died.</p>
-
-<p>Then Hero's wife Virtue said: "My dear,
-we have done our duty by the king. And you
-see how my daughter died of grief. So now
-I say: What good is life to me without my
-children? I was a fool before. I should have
-given my own head to save the king. So now
-permit me to burn myself at once."</p>
-
-<p>And when she insisted, Hero said: "Do
-so. What happiness is there in a life of
-constant mourning for your children? And
-as for your giving your own life instead, do
-not grieve about that. If there had been any
-other way, I should of course have given my
-life. So wait a moment. I will build you
-a funeral pile out of these logs." So he built
-the pile and lighted it.</p>
-
-<p>And Virtue fell at her husband's feet, then
-worshipped the Dreadful Goddess, and prayed:
-"O Goddess, may I have the same husband
-in another life, and may this same King
-Shudraka be saved at the cost of my son's
-life." And she died in the blazing fire.</p>
-
-<p>Then Hero thought: "I have done my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-duty by the king, as the heavenly voice admitted.
-And I have paid for the king's food
-which I have eaten. So now why should I
-want to live alone? It is not right for a
-man like me to go on living at the expense
-of all the family which I ought to support.
-Why should I not please the goddess by
-sacrificing myself?"</p>
-
-<p>So Hero first approached the goddess with
-a hymn of praise: "O Demon-slayer!
-Saviour! Devil-killer! Trident-holder!
-Joy of the wise! Protectress of the universe!
-Victory to thee, O best of mothers, whose
-feet the world adores! O fearless refuge of
-the pious! Kali of the dreadful ornaments!
-Honour and glory to thee, O kindly goddess!
-Be pleased to accept the sacrifice of my head
-in behalf of King Shudraka." Then he
-suddenly cut off his own head with his
-dagger.</p>
-
-<p>King Shudraka beheld this from his hiding-place,
-and was filled with amazement and
-grief and admiration. And he thought: "I
-have never seen or heard the like of this.
-That good man and his family have done a
-hard thing for me. In this strange world who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-else is so brave as that, to give his son, his
-family, and his life for his king? If I should
-not make a full return for his kindness, my
-kingdom would mean nothing to me, and my
-life would be the life of a beast. If I lost my
-virtue, it would all be a disgrace to me."</p>
-
-<p>So the king drew his sword and approached
-the goddess and prayed: "O Goddess, I have
-always been devoted to you. Now be pleased
-with the sacrifice of my body, and grant my
-prayer. Bring back to life this virtuous man
-Hero and his family, who gave their lives
-for me."</p>
-
-<p>But when he started to cut off his own
-head, there came a voice from heaven: "My
-son, do nothing rash. I am well pleased with
-your character. The Brahman Hero and his
-children and his wife shall come back to life."
-And when the voice ceased, Hero stood up
-alive and uninjured with his son and his
-daughter and his wife. Then the king hid
-himself again and looked on with eyes filled
-with tears of joy, and could not see enough
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>Now Hero, like a man awaking from a
-dream, gazed at his son and his wife and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-his daughter, and was greatly perplexed. He
-spoke to each by name, and asked them how
-they had come to life after being reduced to
-ashes. "Is this a fancy of mine? Or a
-dream? Or an illusion? Or the favour of
-the goddess?" And his wife and children
-said to him: "By the favour of the goddess
-we are alive."</p>
-
-<p>At last Hero believed it, and having worshipped
-the goddess, he went home happy
-with his children and his wife. And when
-he had seen his son and his wife and daughter
-safe at home, he went back that same night
-to the palace gate.</p>
-
-<p>And King Shudraka saw all this and went
-back without being seen himself, and climbed
-to the roof, and called: "Who is there
-at the gate?" And Hero replied: "Your
-Majesty, I, Hero, am here. At your command
-I followed the woman who cried. She
-must have been a witch, for she vanished the
-moment I saw her and spoke to her."</p>
-
-<p>When the king heard this, he was astonished
-beyond measure, for he had seen what really
-happened. And he thought: "Ah, the hearts
-of brave men are deep as the sea, if they do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-not boast after doing an unparalleled action."
-So the king descended from the roof, entered
-the palace, and passed the rest of the night
-there.</p>
-
-<p>Then when the court was held in the morning,
-Hero came to see the king. And as he
-stood there, the delighted king told all his
-counsellors and the others the story of the
-night. And all were amazed and confounded
-at hearing of Hero's virtues, and they praised
-him, crying: "Well done! Well done!"</p>
-
-<p>Then the king and Hero lived happily
-together, sharing the power equally.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-asked King Triple-victory: "O King, which
-of all these was the most worthy? If you
-know and will not tell, then the curse I told
-you of will be fulfilled."</p>
-
-<p>And the king said to the goblin: "O
-magic creature, King Shudraka was the most
-noble of them all."</p>
-
-<p>But the goblin said: "Why not Hero, the
-like of whom as a servant is not to be found in
-the whole world? Or why should not his wife
-receive the most praise, who did not waver<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-when she saw her son killed like a beast before
-her eyes? Or why is not the boy Trusty the
-most worthy, who showed such wonderful manhood
-when only a little boy? Why do you
-say that King Shudraka was the best among
-them?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the king answered the goblin: "Not
-Hero. He was a gentleman born, so it was
-his duty to save his king at the cost of life, wife
-and children. And his wife was a lady, a
-faithful wife who only did what was right
-in following her husband. And Trusty was
-their son, and like them. For the cloth is
-always like the threads. But the king has a
-right to use his subjects' lives to save his own.
-So when Shudraka gave his life for them, he
-proved himself the best of all."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he jumped from
-the king's shoulder and went back to his
-home without being seen. And the king was
-not disturbed by this magic, but started back
-through the night to catch him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>FIFTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Brave Man, the Wise Man, and the
-Clever Man. To which should the girl
-be given?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> King Triple-victory went back
-to the sissoo tree and saw the body
-with the goblin in it hanging there just
-as before. He took it down without being
-frightened by all its twistings and writhings,
-and quickly set out again. And as he walked
-along in silence as before, the goblin said: "O
-King, you are obstinate, and you are pleasing
-to look at. So to amuse you, I will tell
-another story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Ujjain, famous throughout
-the world. There lived a king named
-Merit, who had as counsellor a Brahman
-named Hariswami, adorned with all noble
-virtues. The counsellor had a worthy wife,
-and a son named Devaswami was born to her,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-and was as good as she. And they had one
-daughter named Moonlight, who was worthy
-of her name, for she was famous for her matchless
-beauty and charm.</p>
-
-<p>When the girl had grown out of childhood,
-she was proud of her wonderful beauty, and
-she told her mother, her father, and her brother:
-"I will marry a brave man or a wise man or a
-clever man. I should die if I were married to
-anyone else."</p>
-
-<p>Now while her father was busy looking for
-such a husband for her, he was sent by King
-Merit to another king in the southern country
-to make a treaty for war and peace. When he
-had finished his business, a Brahman youth,
-who had heard of his daughter's beauty, came
-and asked him for her.</p>
-
-<p>And he said: "My daughter will not marry
-anyone unless he is a clever man or a wise man
-or a brave man. Which of these are you?
-Tell me." And the Brahman said: "I am a
-clever man." "Show me," said the father, and
-the clever man made a flying chariot by his
-skill. Then he took Hariswami in this magic
-chariot, and carried him to the sky. And he
-took the delighted father to the camp of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-king of the southern country where he had
-been on business. Then Hariswami appointed
-the marriage for the seventh day.</p>
-
-<p>At this time another Brahman youth in
-Ujjain came to the girl's brother and asked him
-for her. And when he was told that she
-would marry only a wise man or a clever man
-or a brave man, he said he was a brave man.
-Then when he had shown his skill with
-weapons, the brother promised his sister to the
-brave man. And without telling his mother,
-he consulted the star-gazers and appointed the
-marriage for the seventh day.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time a third Brahman youth
-came to the girl's mother and asked for the
-girl. And the mother said: "My son, a wise
-man or a clever man or a brave man shall
-marry my daughter, but no one else. Which
-of these are you? Tell me." And he said:
-"I am a wise man." So she asked him about
-the past and the future, and found that he
-was a wise man. Then she promised to give
-him her daughter on the seventh day.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Hariswami came home and
-told his wife and his son all that he had done.
-And she and he each told him all that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-or he had done. So Hariswami was greatly
-perplexed, because three bridegrooms had been
-invited. Then the seventh day came and
-the three bridegrooms came to Hariswami's
-house.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, at that moment Moonlight
-disappeared. Then the wise man said: "A
-giant named Smoke-tail has carried her to his
-den in the Vindhya forest."</p>
-
-<p>When Hariswami heard this from the wise
-man, he was frightened and asked the clever
-man to find a remedy for the trouble. And
-the clever man made a chariot as before, full of
-all kinds of weapons, and brought Hariswami
-with the wise man and the brave man in a
-moment to the Vindhya forest. And the wise
-man showed them the giant's den.</p>
-
-<p>When the giant saw what had happened, he
-came out in anger, and the brave man fought
-with him. Then came a famous duel with
-strange weapons between a man and a giant
-for the sake of a woman, like the ancient fight
-between Rama and Ravana. Though the
-giant was a terrible fighter, the brave man
-presently cut off his head with an arrow shaped
-like a half-moon. When the giant was killed,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>they found Moonlight in the den and all went
-back to Ujjain in the clever man's chariot.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_075.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The giant came out in anger and the brave man fought with him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then when the proper time for the wedding
-came, there arose a great dispute among the
-three in Hariswami's house.</p>
-
-<p>The wise man said: "If I had not discovered
-her by my wisdom, how could you
-have found her hiding-place? She should be
-given to me."</p>
-
-<p>The clever man said: "If I had not made a
-flying chariot, how could you have gone there
-in a moment and come back like the gods, or
-how could you have had a chariot-fight with
-him? She should be given to me."</p>
-
-<p>The brave man said: "If I had not killed
-the giant in the fight, who would have saved
-her in spite of all your pains? The girl
-should be given to me."</p>
-
-<p>And as they quarrelled, Hariswami stood
-silent, confused, and perplexed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-said to the king: "O King, do you say to
-which of them she should be given. If you
-know and will not tell, then your head will
-split into a hundred pieces."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then the king broke silence and said:
-"She should be given to the brave man, who
-risked his life and killed the giant and saved
-the girl. The wise man and the clever man
-were only helpers whom Fate gave him. A
-star-gazer and a chariot-maker work for other
-people, do they not?"</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this answer, he
-suddenly escaped from the king's shoulder
-and went back. And the king determined to
-get him, and went again to the sissoo tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>SIXTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Girl who transposed the Heads of her
-Husband and Brother. Which combination
-of head and body is her husband?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the
-sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder as before, and started in
-silence toward the monk. And the goblin
-said to him: "O King, you are wise and
-good, so I am pleased with you. To amuse
-you, therefore, I will tell you another story
-with a puzzle in it. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Long ago there was a king named Glory-banner
-in the world. His city was named
-Beautiful. And in this city was a splendid
-temple to the goddess Gauri. And to the
-right of the temple was a lake called Bath of
-Gauri. And on a certain day in each year
-a great crowd of people came there on a pilgrimage
-from all directions to bathe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One day a laundryman named White came
-there from another village to bathe. And the
-youth saw a maiden who had also come there
-to bathe. Her name was Lovely, and her
-father's name was Clean-cloth. She robbed
-the moon of its beauty and White of his heart.
-So he inquired about her name and family and
-went home lovesick.</p>
-
-<p>When he got there, he was ill and could not
-eat without her. And when his mother asked
-him, he told her what was in his heart, but
-did not change his habits. But she went
-and told her husband, whose name was
-Spotless.</p>
-
-<p>So Spotless went and saw how his son was
-acting, and said: "My son, why should you
-be downcast? Your desire is not hard to
-obtain. For if I ask Clean-cloth, he will
-surely give you his daughter. We are not
-inferior to him in birth, wealth, or social
-position. I know him and he knows me.
-So there is no difficulty about it." Thus
-Spotless comforted his son, made him eat and
-take care of himself, went with him the next
-day to Clean-cloth's house, and asked that the
-girl might be given to his son White. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-Clean-cloth graciously promised to give her
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>Then when the time came, Clean-cloth gave
-White his charming daughter, a wife worthy
-of him. And when he was married, White
-went happily to his father's house with his
-sweet bride.</p>
-
-<p>Now as he lived there happily, Lovely's
-brother came to visit. And when they had
-all asked him about his health and his sister
-had greeted him with a kiss, and after he had
-rested, he said: "My father sent me to invite
-Lovely and White to a festival in our house."
-And all the relatives said it was a good plan
-and entertained him that day with appropriate
-things to drink and eat.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning White set out for his
-father-in-law's house, together with his brother-in-law
-and Lovely. And when he came to
-the city Beautiful, he saw the great temple of
-Gauri. And he said to Lovely and her
-brother: "We will see this goddess. I will
-go first and you two stay here." So White
-went in to see the goddess. He entered the
-temple and bowed before the goddess whose
-eighteen arms had killed the horrible demons,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-whose lotus-feet were set upon a giant that she
-had crushed.</p>
-
-<p>And when he had worshipped her, an idea
-suddenly came to him. "People honour this
-goddess with all kinds of living sacrifices.
-Why should I not win her favour by sacrificing
-myself?" And he fetched a sword from a
-deserted inner room, cut off his own head, and
-let it fall on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Presently his brother-in-law entered the
-temple to see why he delayed so long. And
-when he saw his brother-in-law with his head
-cut off, he went mad with grief, and cut off
-his own head in the same way with the same
-sword.</p>
-
-<p>Then when he failed to come out, Lovely
-was alarmed and entered the temple. And
-when she saw her husband and her brother
-in that condition, she cried: "Alas! This
-is the end of me!" and fell weeping to the
-floor. But presently she rose, lamenting for
-the pair so unexpectedly dead, and thought:
-"What is my life good for now?"</p>
-
-<p>Before killing herself, she prayed to the
-goddess: "O Goddess! One only deity of
-happiness and character! Partaker of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>life of Shiva! Refuge of all women-folk!
-Destroyer of grief! Why have you killed
-my husband and my brother at one fell
-swoop? It was not right, for I was always
-devoted to you. Then be my refuge when
-I pray to you, and hear my one pitiful prayer.
-I shall leave this wretched body of mine on
-this spot, but in every future life of mine,
-O Goddess, may I have the same husband
-and brother." Thus she prayed, praised, and
-worshipped the goddess, then tied a rope to
-an ashoka tree which grew there.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_082.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">"Do nothing rash, my daughter, leave the rope alone."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But while she was arranging the rope about
-her neck, a voice from heaven cried: "Do
-nothing rash, my daughter. Leave the rope
-alone. Though you are young, I am pleased
-with your unusual goodness. Place the two
-heads on the two bodies and they shall rise
-up again and live through my favour."</p>
-
-<p>So Lovely left the rope alone and joyfully
-went to the bodies. But in her great hurry
-and confusion she made a mistake. She put
-her husband's head on her brother's body and
-her brother's head on her husband's body.
-Then they arose, sound and well, like men
-awaking from a dream. And they were all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-delighted to hear one another's adventures,
-worshipped the goddess, and went on their
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Now as she walked along, Lovely noticed
-that she had made a mistake in their heads.
-And she was troubled and did not know
-what to do.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-asked the king: "O King, when they were
-mingled in this way, which should be her
-husband? If you know and do not tell, then
-the curse I spoke of will be fulfilled."</p>
-
-<p>And the king said to the goblin: "The
-body with the husband's head on it is her
-husband. For the head is the most important
-member. It is by the head that we recognize
-people."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin slipped from the king's
-shoulder as before, and quickly disappeared.
-And the king went back, determined to
-catch him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>SEVENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Mutual Services of King Fierce-lion and
-Prince Good. Which is the more deserving?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the
-sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder as before, and started. And
-as he walked along, the goblin said: "O King,
-I will tell you a story to amuse your weariness.
-Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the shore of the Eastern Ocean is
-Copper City. There a king named Fierce-lion
-lived. He turned his back to other men's
-wives, but not to fighting men. He destroyed
-his enemies, but not other men's wealth.</p>
-
-<p>One day a popular prince named Good came
-from the south to the king's gate. He introduced
-himself, but did not get what he wanted
-from the king. And he thought: "If I am
-born a prince, why am I so poor? And if
-I am to be poor, why did God give me so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-many desires? For this king pays no attention
-to me, though I wait upon him and
-grow weary and faint with hunger."</p>
-
-<p>While he was thinking, the king went
-hunting. He went with many horsemen and
-footmen, and the prince ran along in the
-dress of a pilgrim with a club in his hand.
-And during the hunt the king chased a great
-boar a long distance, and so came into another
-forest. There he lost sight of the boar, for
-the trail was covered with leaves and grass.
-And the king was tired and lost his way in
-the forest. Only the pilgrim-prince thought
-nothing of his life, and hungry and thirsty
-as he was, he followed on foot the king who
-rode a swift horse.</p>
-
-<p>And when the king saw him following, he
-spoke lovingly: "My good man, do you perhaps
-know the way we came?"</p>
-
-<p>And the pilgrim bowed low and said: "I
-know, your Majesty. But first rest yourself a
-moment. The blazing sun, the middle jewel
-in the girdle of heaven's bride, is terribly hot."
-Then the king said eagerly: "See if there is
-water anywhere."</p>
-
-<p>And the pilgrim agreed and climbed a high<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-tree and looked around. And he saw a river
-and climbed down and took the king to it.
-He unsaddled the horse, gave him water and
-grass, and let him rest. And when the king
-had bathed, the pilgrim took two fine mangoes
-from his skirt, washed them and gave them to
-the king.</p>
-
-<p>"Where did you get these?" asked the king,
-and the pilgrim bowed and said: "Your
-Majesty, I have lived on such food for ten
-years. While I was serving your Majesty, I
-had to live like a monk." And the king said:
-"What can I say? You deserve your name of
-Good." And he was filled with pity and shame,
-and thought: "A curse on kings, who do not
-know whether their servants are happy or not!
-And a curse on their attendants, who do not
-tell them this and that!" And when the
-pilgrim insisted, the king was prevailed on to
-take the two mangoes. He rested there with
-the pilgrim and ate the mangoes and drank
-water with the pilgrim, who was accustomed to
-eat mangoes and drink water.</p>
-
-<p>Then the pilgrim saddled the horse and went
-ahead to show the way, and at last, at the
-king's command, mounted behind on the horse;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-so the king found his soldiers and went safely
-home. And when he got there, he proclaimed
-the devotion of the pilgrim, and made him a
-rich man, but could not feel that he had paid
-his debt. So Good stayed there happily with
-King Fierce-lion and stopped living as a
-pilgrim.</p>
-
-<p>One day the king sent Good to Ceylon to
-ask for the hand of the daughter of the King
-of Ceylon. So he set out after sacrificing to
-the proper god, and entered a ship with some
-Brahmans chosen by the king. And when the
-ship had safely reached the middle of the
-ocean, there suddenly arose from the waves a
-very large flag-pole made of gold, with a top
-that touched the sky. It was adorned with
-waving banners of various colours and was quite
-astonishing.</p>
-
-<p>At the same moment the clouds gathered, it
-began to rain violently, and a mighty wind
-blew. And the ship was driven by the storm
-winds and caught on the flag-pole. Then the
-pole began to sink, dragging the ship with it
-into the raging waves. And the Brahmans
-who were there were overcome with fear and
-cursed the name of their king Fierce-lion.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_091.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Good sank into the ocean, and when he looked about
-he saw a wonderful city.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But Good could not endure that because of
-his devotion to his king. He took his sword
-in his hand, girt up his garment, and threw
-himself after the flag-pole into the sea. He
-had no fear of the pole which seemed a refuge
-from the ocean. Then as he sank, the ship
-was battered by the winds and waves and
-broke up. And all in it fell into the mouths of
-sharks.</p>
-
-<p>But Good sank into the ocean, and when he
-looked about he saw a wonderful city. There
-he entered a shrine to Gauri, tall as the
-heavenly mountain, with great gem-sprinkled
-banners on walls made of different kinds of
-jewels, in a golden temple blazing with jewelled
-pillars, with a garden that had a pool, the
-stairs to which were made of splendid gems.
-After he had bowed low and praised and
-worshipped the goddess there, he sat down
-before her in amazement, wondering if it was
-all a conjuror's trick.</p>
-
-<p>Just then the door was suddenly opened
-by a heavenly maiden. Her eyes were like
-lotuses, her face like the moon. She had
-a smile like a flower and a body soft as lotus-stems.
-And a thousand women waited upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-her. She entered the shrine of the goddess
-and the heart of Good at the same moment.
-And when she had worshipped the goddess
-there, she went out from the shrine, but not
-from the heart of Good.</p>
-
-<p>She entered a circle of light, and Good
-followed her. And he saw another splendid
-house, that seemed like a place of meeting for
-all riches and all enjoyments. And he saw
-the girl sitting on a jewelled couch, and he
-approached and sat beside her. He was like
-a man painted in a picture, for his eyes were
-fastened on her face.</p>
-
-<p>Now a servant of the maiden saw that his
-body was thrilled, that he was intent upon the
-maiden, that he was in love. She understood
-his feelings and said to him: "Sir, you are
-our guest. Enjoy the hospitality of my
-mistress. Arise. Bathe. Eat." And he felt a
-little hope at her words and went to a pool
-in the garden which she showed him.</p>
-
-<p>He plunged into the pool, and when he
-rose to the surface, he found himself in the
-pool of King Fierce-lion in Copper City. And
-when he saw that he had come there so
-suddenly, he thought: "Oh, what does it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-mean? Where is that heavenly garden?
-What a difference between the sight of that
-girl which was like nectar to me, and this
-immediate separation from her which is like
-terrible poison! It was no dream. I was
-awake when the serving-maid deceived me
-and made a fool of me."</p>
-
-<p>He was like a madman without the girl.
-He wandered in the garden and mourned in
-a lovelorn way. He was surrounded by
-wind-blown flower-pollen which seemed to
-him the yellow flames of separation. And
-when the gardener saw him in this state, he
-went and told the king.</p>
-
-<p>And the king was troubled. He went
-himself to see Good, and asked him soothingly:
-"What does this mean? Tell me,
-my friend. Where did you go? And where
-did you come? And where did you stay?
-And what did you fall into?"</p>
-
-<p>Then Good told him the whole adventure.
-And the king thought: "Ah, it is fortunate
-for me that this brave man is lovelorn. For
-now I have a chance to pay my debt to him."
-So the king said to him: "My friend, give
-over this vain grief. I will go with you by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-the same road, and bring you to the heavenly
-maiden." So he comforted Good, and made
-him take a bath.</p>
-
-<p>The next day he transferred his royal duties
-to his counsellors and entered a ship with
-Good. Good showed the way through the
-sea and they saw the flag-pole with its banners
-rising as before in the middle of the ocean.
-Then Good said to the king: "Your Majesty,
-here is the magic flag-pole standing up.
-When I sink down there, you must sink too
-along the flag-pole." So when they came near
-the sinking pole, Good jumped first, and
-the king followed him.</p>
-
-<p>They sank down and came to the heavenly
-city. And the king was astonished, and after
-he had worshipped the goddess, he sat down
-with Good. Then the girl, like Beauty
-personified, came out of the circle of light
-with her friends. "There she is, the lovely
-creature," said Good, and the king thought:
-"He is quite right to love her." But when
-she saw the king looking like a god, she
-wondered who the strange and wonderful man
-might be, and entered the shrine to worship
-the goddess.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the king took Good and went into
-the garden to show how little he cared about
-her. A moment later the girl came from the
-shrine; she had been praying for a good
-husband. And she said to a girl friend: "My
-friend, I wonder where I could see the man
-who was here. Where is the great man?
-You girls must hunt for him and ask him
-to be good enough to come and accept our
-hospitality. For he is a wonderful man, and
-we must be polite to him."</p>
-
-<p>So the girl found him in the garden and
-gave him her mistress' message very respectfully.
-But the brave king spoke loftily to
-her: "Your words are hospitality enough.
-Nothing else is necessary."</p>
-
-<p>Now when her mistress had heard what
-he said, she thought he was a noble character,
-better than anybody else. She was attracted
-by the courage of the king in refusing a sort
-of hospitality which was almost too much to
-offer a mere man, and thought about the
-fulfilment of her prayer for a husband. So
-she went into the garden herself. She drew
-near to the king and lovingly begged him
-to accept her hospitality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the king pointed to Good and said:
-"My dear girl, he told me of the goddess
-here, and I came to see her. And by following
-the flag-pole I saw the goddess and her
-very marvellous temple. It was only afterwards
-that I happened to see you."</p>
-
-<p>Then the girl said: "O King, you may
-be interested in seeing a city which is the
-wonder of the three worlds." And the king
-laughed and said: "He told me about that,
-too. I believe there is a pool for bathing
-there." And the girl said: "O King, do
-not say that. I am not a deceitful girl. Why
-should I deceive an honourable man, especially
-as your noble character has made me feel like
-a servant? Pray do not refuse me."</p>
-
-<p>So the king agreed and went with Good
-and the girl to the edge of the circle of light.
-There a door opened and he entered and saw
-another heavenly city like a second hill of
-heaven; for it was built of gems and gold,
-and the flowers and fruits of every season
-grew there at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>And the princess seated the king on a
-splendid throne and brought him gifts and
-said: "Your Majesty, I am the daughter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-of the great god Black-wheel. But Vishnu
-sent my father to heaven. And I inherited
-these two magic cities where one has everything
-he wants. There is no old age or death
-to trouble us here. And now you are in the
-place of my father to rule over the cities and
-over me." So she offered him herself and
-all she had. But the king said: "In that
-case you are my daughter and I give you
-in marriage to my brave friend Good."</p>
-
-<p>In the king's words she saw the fulfilment
-of her prayer, and being sensible and modest,
-she agreed. So the king married them and
-gave all the magic wealth to happy Good,
-and said: "My friend, I have paid you now
-for one of the two mangoes which I ate. But
-I remain in your debt for the second."</p>
-
-<p>Then he asked the princess how he could
-get back to his city. And she gave the king
-a sword called Invincible, and the magic
-fruit which wards off birth, old age, and death.
-And the king took the sword and the fruit,
-plunged into the pool which she showed him,
-and came up in his own country, feeling
-completely successful. But Good ruled happily
-over the kingdom of the princess.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-asked the king: "O King, which of these
-two deserves more credit for plunging into
-the sea?"</p>
-
-<p>And the king was afraid of the curse, so
-he gave a true answer: "Good seems to me
-the more deserving, for he did not know the
-truth beforehand, but plunged without hope
-into the sea, while the king knew the truth
-when he jumped."</p>
-
-<p>And as soon as the king broke silence, the
-goblin slipped from his shoulder as before
-without being seen and went to the sissoo tree.
-And the king tried as before to catch him.
-Brave men do not waver until they have
-finished what they have begun.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>EIGHTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Specialist in Food, the Specialist in Women,
-and the Specialist in Cotton. Which is
-the cleverest?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">So</span> the king went back under the sissoo
-tree, caught the goblin just as before,
-put him on his shoulder, and started
-toward the monk. And as he walked along,
-the goblin on his shoulder spoke and said:
-"O King, listen once more to the following
-story to beguile your weariness."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the Anga country there is a great region
-called Forest. There lived a great Brahman,
-pious and wealthy, whose name was Vishnuswami.
-To his worthy wife three sons were
-born, one after another. When they had
-grown to be young men, specialists in matters of
-luxury, they were sent one day by their father
-to find a turtle for a sacrifice which he had begun.</p>
-
-<p>So the brothers went to the ocean and there
-they found a turtle. Then the eldest said to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-the two younger: "One of you take this
-turtle for Father's sacrifice. I cannot carry a
-slimy thing that smells raw."</p>
-
-<p>But when the eldest said this, the two
-younger said: "Sir, if you feel disgust, why
-shouldn't we?"</p>
-
-<p>When the eldest heard this, he said: "You
-take the turtle, otherwise Father's sacrifice will
-be ruined on your account. Then you and
-Father too will surely go to hell."</p>
-
-<p>When they heard him, the two younger
-brothers laughed and said: "Sir, you seem to
-know our common duty, but not your own."</p>
-
-<p>Then the eldest said: "What! Are you
-not aware that I am a connoisseur in food?
-For I am a specialist in foods. How can I
-touch this loathsome thing?"</p>
-
-<p>When he heard these words, the second
-brother said: "But I am even more of a connoisseur.
-I am a specialist in women. So
-how can I touch it?"</p>
-
-<p>After this speech, the eldest said to the
-youngest: "Do you then, being younger than
-we, carry the turtle."</p>
-
-<p>Then the youngest frowned and said to them:
-"Fools! I am a great specialist in cotton."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So the three brothers quarrelled, and arrogantly
-leaving the turtle behind them, they
-went to have the matter decided at Pinnacle,
-the capital of a king called Conqueror. When
-they came there, and had been announced and
-introduced by the door-keeper, they told their
-story to the king. And when the king had
-heard all, he said: "Stay here. I will examine
-you one after another." So they agreed and
-all stayed there.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king invited them in at his own
-dinner hour, seated them on magnificent seats,
-and set before them sweet dishes of six flavours,
-fit for a king. While all the rest ate, one of
-the Brahmans, the specialist in food, disgustedly
-shook his head and refused to eat. And when
-the king himself asked him why he would not
-eat food that was sweet and savoury, he respectfully
-replied: "Your Majesty, in this food
-there is the odour of smoke from a burning
-corpse. Therefore, I do not wish to eat it,
-however sweet it may be."</p>
-
-<p>Then at the king's command all the rest
-smelt of it and declared it the best of winter
-rice, and perfectly sweet. But the food-critic
-held his nose and would not touch it. Now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-when the king reflected and made a careful
-investigation, he learned from the commissioners
-that the dish was made of rice grown near
-a village crematory. Then he was greatly
-astonished and pleased, and said: "Brahman,
-you are certainly a judge of food. Pray take
-something else."</p>
-
-<p>After dinner the king dismissed them to
-their rooms, and sent for the most beautiful
-woman of his court. And at night he sent
-this lovely creature, all adorned, to the second
-brother, the specialist in women. She came
-with a servant of the king to his chamber,
-and when she entered, she seemed to illuminate
-the room. But the judge of women almost
-fainted, and stopping his nose with his left
-hand, he said to his servants: "Take her away!
-If not, I shall die. A goaty smell issues from her."</p>
-
-<p>So the servants, in distress and astonishment,
-conducted her to the king and told him what
-had happened. Then the king sent for the
-specialist in women, and said: "Brahman, she
-has anointed herself with sandal, camphor, and
-aloes, so that a delightful perfume pervades
-her neighbourhood. How could this woman
-have a goaty smell?" But in spite of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>the specialist in women would not yield. And
-when the king endeavoured to learn the truth,
-he heard from her own lips that in her infancy
-she had been separated from her mother and
-had been brought up on goat's milk. Then the
-king was greatly astonished and loudly praised
-the critical judgment of the specialist in women.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_104.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The brothers went to the ocean, and there they found a turtle.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Quickly he had a couch prepared for the
-third brother, the specialist in cotton. So the
-critic of cotton went to sleep on a bed with
-seven quilts over the frame and covered with
-a pure, soft coverlet. When only a half of
-the first watch of the night was gone, he
-suddenly started from the bed, shouting and
-writhing with pain, his hand pressed to his
-side. And the king's men who were stationed
-there saw the curly red outline of a hair deeply
-imprinted on his side.</p>
-
-<p>They went at once and informed the king,
-who said to them: "See whether there is
-anything under the quilts or not." So they
-went and searched under each quilt, and under
-the last they found one hair, which they
-immediately took and showed to the king.
-And the king summoned the specialist in
-cotton, and finding the mark exactly corre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>sponding
-to the hair, was filled with extreme
-astonishment. And he spent that night
-wondering how the hair could sink into his
-body through seven quilts.</p>
-
-<p>Now when the king arose in the morning,
-he was delighted with their marvellous critical
-judgment and sensitiveness, so that he gave
-each of the three specialists a hundred thousand
-gold-pieces. And they were contented and
-stayed there, forgetting all about the turtle,
-and thus incurring a crime through the failure
-of their father's sacrifice.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When he had told this remarkable story,
-the goblin on the king's shoulder said: "O
-King, remember the curse I spoke of and
-declare which of these three was the cleverest."</p>
-
-<p>When he heard this, the wise king answered
-the goblin: "Without doubt I regard the
-specialist in cotton as the cleverest, on whose
-body the imprint of the hair was seen to
-appear visibly. The other two might possibly
-have found out beforehand."</p>
-
-<p>When the king had said this, the goblin slipped
-from his shoulder as before. And the king went
-back under the sissoo tree again to fetch him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>NINTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Four Scientific Suitors. To which should
-the girl be given?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the
-sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started. And the goblin
-spoke to him again: "O King, why do
-you go to such pains in this cemetery at
-night? Do you not see the home of the
-ghosts, full of dreadful creatures, terrible in
-the night, wrapped in darkness as in smoke?
-Why do you work so hard and grow weary
-for the sake of that monk? Well, to amuse
-the journey, listen to a puzzle which I will
-tell you."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the Avanti country is a city built by
-the gods at the beginning of time, adorned
-with wonderful wealth and opportunities for
-enjoyment. In the earliest age it was called
-Lotus City, then Pleasure City, then Golden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-City, and now it is called Ujjain. There
-lived a king named Heroic. And his queen
-was named Lotus.</p>
-
-<p>One day the king went with her to the
-sacred Ganges river and prayed to Shiva that
-he might have children. And after long
-prayer he heard a voice from heaven, for
-Shiva was at last pleased with his devotion:
-"O King, there shall be born to you a
-brave son to continue your dynasty, and a
-daughter more beautiful than the nymphs of
-heaven."</p>
-
-<p>When he heard the heavenly voice, the
-king was delighted at the fulfilment of his
-wishes, and went back to his city with the
-queen. And first Queen Lotus bore a son
-called Brave, and then a daughter named
-Grace who put the god of love to shame.</p>
-
-<p>When the girl grew up, the king sought
-for a suitable husband for her, and invited
-all the neighbouring princes by letter, but
-not one of them seemed good enough for
-her. So the king tenderly said to his
-daughter: "My dear, I do not see a husband
-worthy of you, so I will summon all the
-kings hither, and you shall choose." But the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>princess said: "My dear father, such a choice
-would be very embarrassing. I would rather
-not. Just marry me to any good-looking
-young man, who understands a single science
-from beginning to end. I wish nothing more
-nor less than that."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_111.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">"I understand the cries of all beasts and birds."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Now while the king was looking for such
-a husband, four brave, good-looking, scientific
-men from the south heard of the matter and
-came to him. And when they had been
-hospitably received, each explained his own
-science to the king.</p>
-
-<p>The first said: "I am a working-man, and
-my name is Five-cloth. I make five splendid
-suits of clothes a day. One I give to some
-god and one to a Brahman. One I wear
-myself, and one I shall give to my wife
-when I have one. The fifth I sell, to buy
-food and things. This is my science. Pray
-give me Grace."</p>
-
-<p>The second said: "I am a farmer, and my
-name is Linguist. I understand the cries of
-all beasts and birds. Pray give me the
-princess."</p>
-
-<p>The third said: "I am a strong-armed
-soldier, and my name is Swordsman. I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-no rival on earth in the science of swordsmanship.
-O King, pray give me your
-daughter."</p>
-
-<p>The fourth said: "O King, I am a Brahman,
-and my name is Life. I possess a
-wonderful science. For if dead creatures are
-brought to me, I can quickly restore them to
-life. Let your daughter find a husband in
-a man who has such heroic skill."</p>
-
-<p>When they had spoken, and the king had
-seen that they all had wonderful garments and
-personal beauty, he and his daughter swung in
-doubt.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he said
-to the king: "Remember the curse I mentioned,
-and tell me to which of them the girl should be
-given."</p>
-
-<p>And the king said to the goblin: "Sir, you
-are merely trying to gain time by making me
-break silence. There is no puzzle about that.
-How could a warrior's daughter be given to
-a working-man, a weaver? Or to a farmer,
-either? And as to his knowledge of the
-speech of beasts and birds, of what practical
-use is it? And what good is a Brahman who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-neglects his own affairs and turns magician,
-despising real courage? Of course she should
-be given to the warrior Swordsman who had
-some manhood with his science."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he escaped by
-magic from the king's shoulder, and disappeared.
-And the king followed him as before. Discouragement
-never enters the brave heart of a
-resolute man.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Three Delicate Wives of King Virtue-banner.
-Which is the most delicate?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went to the sissoo tree,
-put the goblin on his shoulder once
-more, and started toward the monk.
-And as he walked along, the goblin on his
-shoulder said: "O King, I will tell you a
-strange story to relieve your weariness.
-Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There once was a king in Ujjain, whose
-name was Virtue-banner. He had three
-princesses as wives, and loved them dearly.
-One of them was named Crescent, the second
-Star, and the third Moon. While the king
-lived happily with his wives, he conquered all
-his enemies, and was content.</p>
-
-<p>One day at the time of the spring festival,
-the king went to the garden to play with his
-three wives. There he looked at the flower-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>laden
-vines with black rows of bees on them;
-they seemed like the bow of the god of love,
-all ready for service. He heard the songs of
-nightingales in the trees; they sounded like
-commands of Love. And with his wives he
-drank wine which seemed like Love's very
-life-blood.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king playfully pulled the hair of
-Queen Crescent, and a lotus-petal fell from her
-hair into her lap. And the queen was so delicate
-that it wounded her, and she screamed and
-fainted. And the king was distracted, but
-when servants sprinkled her with cool water
-and fanned her, she gradually recovered consciousness.
-And the king took her to the
-palace and waited upon his dear wife with
-a hundred remedies which the physicians
-brought.</p>
-
-<p>And when the king saw that she was made
-comfortable for the night, he went to the palace
-balcony with his second wife Star. Now while
-she slept on the king's breast, the moonbeams
-found their way through the window and fell
-upon her. And she awoke in a moment, and
-started up, crying "I am burned!" Then the
-king awoke and anxiously asked what the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>matter was, and he saw great blisters on her
-body. When he asked her about it, Queen
-Star said: "The moonbeams that fell on me
-did it." And the king was distracted when he
-saw how she wept and suffered. He called the
-servants and they made a couch of moist lotus-leaves,
-and dressed her wounds with damp
-sandal-paste.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_118.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">She gradually recovered consciousness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>At that moment the third queen, Moon, left
-her room to go to the king. And as she
-moved through the noiseless night, she clearly
-heard in a distant part of the palace the sound
-of pestles grinding grain. And she cried:
-"Oh, oh! It will kill me!" She wrung her
-hands and sat down in agony in the hall.
-But her servants returned and led her to her
-room, where she took to her bed and wept.
-And when the servants asked what the matter
-was, she tearfully showed her hands with
-bruises on them, like two lilies with black
-bees clinging to them. So they went and
-told the king. And he came in great distress,
-and asked his dear wife about it. She showed
-her hands and spoke, though she suffered:
-"My dear, when I heard the sound of the
-pestles, these bruises came." Then the king<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-made them give her a cooling plaster of sandal-paste
-and other things.</p>
-
-<p>And the king thought: "One of them was
-wounded by a falling lotus-petal. The second
-was burned by the moonbeams. The third
-had her hands terribly bruised by the sound
-of pestles. I love them dearly, but alas!
-The very delicacy which is so great a virtue,
-is positively inconvenient."</p>
-
-<p>And he wandered about in the palace, and
-it seemed as if the night had three hundred
-hours. But in the morning the king and his
-skilful physicians took such measures that
-before long his wives were well and he
-was happy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When he had told this story, the goblin
-asked: "O King, which of them was the
-most delicate?" And the king said: "The
-one who was bruised by the mere sound of
-the pestles, when nothing touched her. The
-other two who were wounded or blistered by
-actual contact with lotus-petals or moonbeams,
-are not equal to her."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he went back, and
-the king resolutely hastened to catch him again.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>ELEVENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The King who won a Fairy as his Wife.
-Why did his counsellor's heart break?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went as before to
-the sissoo tree, put the goblin on
-his shoulder, and started back. And
-the goblin said once more: "O King, I like
-you wonderfully well because you are not
-discouraged. So I will tell you a delightful
-little story to relieve your weariness.
-Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the Anga country was a young king
-named Glory-banner, so beautiful that he
-seemed an incarnation of the god of love.
-He had conquered all his enemies by his
-strength of arm, and he had a counsellor
-named Farsight.</p>
-
-<p>At last the king, proud of his youth and
-beauty, entrusted all the power in his quiet
-kingdom to his counsellor, and gradually de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>voted
-himself entirely to pleasure. He spent
-all his time with the ladies of the court, and
-listened more attentively to their love-songs
-than to the advice of statesmen. He took
-greater pleasure in peeping into their windows
-than into the holes in his administration. But
-Farsight bore the whole burden of public
-business, and never wearied day or night.</p>
-
-<p>Then the people began to murmur: "The
-counsellor Farsight has seduced the king, and
-now he alone has all the kingly glory." And
-the counsellor said to his wife, whose name
-was Prudence: "My dear, the king is devoted
-to his pleasures, and great infamy is
-heaped upon me by the people. They say I
-have devoured the kingdom, though in fact
-I support the burden of it. Now popular
-gossip damages the greatest man. Was not
-Rama forced to abandon his good wife by
-popular clamour? So what shall I do now?"</p>
-
-<p>Then his clever wife Prudence showed that
-she deserved her name. She said: "My
-dear, leave the king and go on a pilgrimage.
-Tell him that you are an old man now,
-and should be permitted to travel in foreign
-countries for a time. Then the gossip will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-cease, when they see that you are unselfish.
-And when you are gone, the king will bear
-his own burdens. And thus his levity will
-gradually disappear. And when you come back,
-you can assume your office without reproach."</p>
-
-<p>To this advice the counsellor assented, and
-said to the king in the course of conversation:
-"Your Majesty, permit me to go on a
-pilgrimage for a few days. Virtue seems of
-supreme importance to me."</p>
-
-<p>But the king said: "No, no, counsellor.
-Is there no other kind of virtue except in
-pilgrimages? How about generosity and that
-kind of thing? Isn't it possible to prepare for
-heaven in your own house?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor said: "Your Majesty,
-one gets worldly prosperity from generosity
-and that kind of thing. But a pilgrimage
-gives eternal life. A prudent man should
-attend to it while he has strength. The
-chance may be lost, for no one can be sure
-of his health."</p>
-
-<p>But the king was still arguing against it
-when the door-keeper came in and said:
-"Your Majesty, the glorious sun is diving
-beneath the pool of heaven. Arise. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-hour for your bath is slipping away." And
-the king went immediately to bathe.</p>
-
-<p>The counsellor went home, still determined
-on his pilgrimage. He would not let his wife
-go with him, but started secretly. Not even
-his servants knew.</p>
-
-<p>He wandered alone through many countries
-to many holy places, and finally came to the
-Odra country. There he saw a city near
-the ocean, where he entered a temple to Shiva
-and sat down in the court. There he sat,
-hot and dusty from long travel, when he was
-seen by a merchant named Treasure who had
-come to worship the god. The merchant
-gathered from his dress and appearance that
-he was a high-born Brahman, and invited him
-home, and entertained him with food, bathing,
-and the like.</p>
-
-<p>When the counsellor was rested, the merchant
-asked him: "Who are you? Whence
-do you come? And where are you going?"
-And the other replied: "I am a Brahman
-named Farsight. I came here on a pilgrimage
-from the Anga country."</p>
-
-<p>Then the merchant Treasure said to him:
-"I am preparing for a trading voyage to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-Golden Island. Do you stay in my house.
-And when I come back, and you are wearied
-from your pilgrimage, rest here for a time
-before going home." But Farsight said: "I
-do not want to stay here. I would rather go
-with you." And the good merchant agreed.
-And the counsellor slept in the first bed he
-had lain in for many nights.</p>
-
-<p>The next day he went to the seashore with
-the merchant, and entered the ship loaded
-with the merchant's goods. He sailed along,
-admiring the wonders and terrors of the sea,
-till at last he reached Golden Island. There
-he stayed for a time until the merchant had
-finished his buying and selling. Now on the
-way back, he saw a magic tree suddenly rising
-from the ocean. It had beautiful branches,
-boughs of gold, fruits of jewels, and splendid
-blossoms. And sitting on a jewelled couch in
-the branches was a lovely maiden of heavenly
-beauty. And while the counsellor wondered
-what it all meant, the maiden took her lute in
-her hand, and began to sing:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Whatever seed of fate is sown,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The fruit appears&mdash;'tis strange!</div>
- <div class="verse">Whatever deed a man has done,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Not God himself can change.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-<p>And when she had made her meaning clear,
-the heavenly maiden straightway sank with
-the magic tree and the couch. And Farsight
-thought: "What a wonderful thing I have
-seen to-day! What a strange place the ocean
-is for the appearance of a tree with a fairy in
-it! And if this is a usual occurrence at sea,
-why do not other goddesses arise?"</p>
-
-<p>The pilot and other sailors saw that he
-was astonished, and they said: "Sir, this
-wonderful maiden appears here regularly,
-and sinks a moment after, but the sight is
-new to you." Then the counsellor, filled
-with amazement, came to the shore with
-Treasure, and disembarked. And when the
-merchant had unloaded his goods and caused
-his servants to rejoice, the counsellor went
-home with him and spent many happy days
-there.</p>
-
-<p>At last he said to Treasure: "Merchant,
-I have rested happily for a long time in your
-house. Now I wish to go to my own country.
-Peace be with you!" And in spite of
-urging from the merchant, Farsight took his
-leave, and started with no companion except
-his own courage. He went through many
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>countries and at last reached the Anga
-country. And scouts who had been sent by
-King Glory-banner saw him before he reached
-the city. When the king learned of it, he
-went himself out of the city to meet him,
-for he had been terribly grieved by the
-separation. He drew near, embraced and
-greeted the counsellor and took him, all
-worn and dusty with the weary journey,
-into an inner room.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_129.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">When he saw that she was saved, the king cried
-"Come, come to me!"</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And as soon as the counsellor was refreshed,
-the king said: "Counsellor, why did you
-leave us? How could you bring yourself
-to do so harsh and loveless a thing? But
-after all, who can understand the strange
-workings of stern necessity? To think that
-you should decide all at once to wander off
-on a pilgrimage! Well, tell me what countries
-you visited, and what new things you saw."</p>
-
-<p>Then the counsellor told him the whole
-story truthfully and in order, the journey
-to Golden Island and the fairy who rose
-singing from the sea, her wonderful beauty
-and the magic tree.</p>
-
-<p>But the king immediately fell in love so
-hopelessly that his kingdom and his life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-seemed worthless to him without her. He
-took the counsellor aside and said: "Counsellor,
-I simply must see her. Remember that
-I shall die if I do not. I bow to my fate. I
-will take the journey which you took. You
-must not refuse me nor accompany me. I
-shall go alone and in disguise. You must
-rule the kingdom, and not dispute my words.
-Swear to do it on your life."</p>
-
-<p>So he spoke, and would not listen to advice,
-but dismissed the counsellor. Then Farsight
-was unhappy though a great festival was made
-for him. How can a good counsellor be
-happy when his master devotes himself to
-a vice?</p>
-
-<p>The next night King Glory-banner threw
-the burden of government on that excellent
-counsellor, assumed the dress of a hermit,
-and left his city. And as he travelled, he
-saw a monk named Grass, who said when the
-king bowed before him as a holy man: "My
-son, if you sail with a merchant named
-Fortune, you will obtain the maiden you
-desire. Go on fearlessly."</p>
-
-<p>So the king bowed again and went on
-rejoicing. After crossing rivers and mountains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-he came to the ocean. And on the shore
-he met at once the merchant Fortune whom
-the monk had mentioned, bound for Golden
-Island. And when the merchant saw the
-king's appearance and his signet ring, he
-bowed low, took him on the ship, and set
-sail.</p>
-
-<p>When the ship reached the middle of the
-sea, the maiden suddenly arose, sitting in the
-branches of the magic tree. And as the king
-gazed eagerly at her, she sang as before to
-her lute:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Whatever seed of fate is sown,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The fruit appears&mdash;'tis strange!</div>
- <div class="verse">Whatever deed a man has done,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Not God himself can change.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Whatever, how, for whom, and where</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">'Tis fated so to be,</div>
- <div class="verse">That thing, just so, for him, and there</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Must happen fatally.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>This song she sang, hinting at what was
-to happen. And the king gazed at her
-smitten by love, and could not move. Then
-he cried: "O Sea, in hiding her, you deceive
-those who think they have your treasures.
-Honour and glory to you! I seek your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-protection. Grant me my desire!" And as
-the king prayed, the maiden sank with the
-tree. Then the king jumped after her into
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The good merchant Fortune thought he
-was lost and was ready to die of grief. But
-he was comforted by a voice from heaven
-which said: "Do nothing rash. There is
-no danger when he sinks in the sea. For
-he is the king Glory-banner, disguised as a
-hermit. He came here for the sake of the
-maiden; she was his wife in a former life.
-And he will win her and return to his
-kingdom in the Anga country." So the
-merchant sailed on to complete his business.</p>
-
-<p>But King Glory-banner sank in the sea,
-and all at once he saw a heavenly city. He
-looked in amazement at the balconies with
-their splendid jewelled pillars, their walls bright
-with gold, and the network of pearls in their
-windows. And he saw gardens with pools
-that had stairways of various gems, and magic
-trees that yielded all desires. But rich as it
-was, the city was deserted.</p>
-
-<p>He entered house after house, but did not
-find the maiden anywhere. Then he climbed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-a high balcony built of gems, opened a door,
-and entered. And there he saw her all alone,
-lying on a jewelled couch, and clad in splendid
-garments. He eagerly raised her face to see
-if it was really she, and saw that it was indeed
-the maiden he sought. At the sight of her he
-had the strange feeling of the traveller in a
-desert in summer at the sight of a river.</p>
-
-<p>And she opened her eyes, saw that he was
-handsome and loveable, and left her couch in
-confusion. But she welcomed him and with
-downcast eyes that seemed like full-blown
-lotuses she did honour to his feet. Then she
-slowly spoke: "Who are you, sir? How did
-you come to this inaccessible under-world?
-And what is this hermit garb? For I see
-that you are a king. Oh, sir, if you would do
-me a kindness, tell me this."</p>
-
-<p>And the king answered her: "Beautiful
-maiden, I am King Glory-banner of the Anga
-country, and I heard from a reliable person
-that you were to be seen on the sea. To see
-you I assumed this garb, left my kingdom,
-and followed you hither. Oh, tell me who
-you are."</p>
-
-<p>Then she said to him with bashful love:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-"Sir, there is a king of the fairies named
-Moonshine. I am his daughter, and my name
-is Moonlight. Now my father has left me
-alone in this city. I do not know where he
-went with the rest of the people, or why.
-Therefore, as my home is lonely, I rise through
-the ocean, sit on a magic tree, and sing about
-fate."</p>
-
-<p>Then the king remembered the words of
-the monk, and urged her with such gentle,
-tender words that she confessed her love and
-agreed to marry him. But she made a condition:
-"My dear, on four set days in each
-month you must let me go somewhere
-unhindered and unseen. There is a reason."
-And the king agreed, married her, and lived
-in heavenly happiness with her.</p>
-
-<p>While he was living in heavenly bliss,
-Moonlight said to him one day: "My dear,
-you must wait here. I am going somewhere
-on an errand. For this is one of the set days.
-While you stay here, sweetheart, you must not
-go into that crystal room, nor plunge into this
-pool. If you do, you will find yourself at
-that very moment in the world again." So she
-said good-bye and left the city.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the king took his sword and followed,
-to learn her secret. And he saw a giant
-approaching with a great black cave of a mouth
-that yawned like the pit. The giant fell down
-and howled horribly, then took Moonlight into
-his mouth and swallowed her.</p>
-
-<p>And the king's anger blazed forth. He
-took his great sword, black as a snake that has
-sloughed its skin, ran up wrathfully, and cut
-off the giant's head. He was blinded by his
-madness, he did not know what to do, he was
-afflicted by the loss of his darling. But Moonlight
-split open the stomach of the giant, and
-came out alive and unhurt, like the brilliant,
-spotless moon coming out from a black cloud.</p>
-
-<p>When he saw that she was saved, the king
-cried: "Come, come to me!" and ran forward
-and embraced her. And he asked her: "What
-does it mean, dearest? Is this a dream, or an
-illusion?" And the fairy answered: "My
-dear, listen to me. It is not a dream, not an
-illusion. My father, the king of the fairies,
-laid this curse upon me. My father had many
-sons, but he loved me so that he could not eat
-without me. And I used to come to this
-deserted spot twice a month to worship Shiva.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"One day I came here and it happened that
-I spent the whole day in worship. That day
-my father waited for me and would not eat or
-drink anything, though he was hungry and
-angry with me. At night I stood before him
-with downcast eyes, for I had done wrong.
-And he forgot his love and cursed me&mdash;so
-strong is fate. 'Because you have despised
-me and left me hungry a whole day, a giant
-named Terror-of-Fate will swallow you four
-times a month when you leave the city. And
-each time you will split him open and come
-out. And you shall not remember the curse
-afterwards, nor the pain of being swallowed
-alive. And you must live here alone.'</p>
-
-<p>"But when I begged him, he thought awhile
-and softened the curse. 'When Glory-banner,
-King of the Angas, shall become
-your husband, and shall see you swallowed
-by the giant, and shall kill the giant, then
-the curse shall end, and you shall remember
-all your magic arts.' Then he left me here,
-and went with his people to the Nishadha
-mountain. But I stayed here because of the
-curse. And now the curse is ended, and I
-remember everything. So now I shall go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-to the Nishadha mountain to see my father.
-Of course now I remember how to fly. And
-you are at liberty to stay here, or to go back
-to your own kingdom."</p>
-
-<p>Then the king was sad, and he begged
-her thus: "My beautiful wife, do not go
-for seven days. Be as kind as you are beautiful.
-Let me be happy with you in the
-garden, and forget my longings. Then you
-may go to your father, and I will go home."
-So he persuaded her, and was happy with
-her for six days in the garden. And the
-lilies in the ponds looked like longing eyes,
-and the ripples like hands raised to detain
-them, and the cries of swans and cranes
-seemed to say: "Do not leave us and go
-away."</p>
-
-<p>On the seventh day the king cleverly led
-his wife to the pool from which one could
-get back to the world. There he threw his
-arms about her and plunged into the pool,
-and came up with her in the pool in the
-garden of his own palace.</p>
-
-<p>The gardeners saw that the king had come
-back with a wife, and they joyfully ran and
-told the counsellor Farsight. He came and fell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-at the king's feet, and then led the king
-and the fairy into the palace. And the
-counsellor and the people thought: "Wonderful!
-The king has won the fairy whom
-others could see only for a moment like the
-lightning in the sky. Whatever is written
-in one's fate, that comes true, however impossible
-it may be."</p>
-
-<p>But when Moonlight saw that the king
-was in his own country, and the seven days
-were over, she thought she would fly away
-like other fairies. But she could not remember
-how. Then she became very sad,
-like a woman who has been robbed.</p>
-
-<p>And the king said: "Why are you so sad,
-my dear? Tell me." And the fairy said:
-"The curse is over. Yet because I have been
-bound so long in the fetters of your love, I
-have lost my magic arts. I cannot fly."
-Then the king thought: "The fairy is really
-mine," and he was happy and made a great
-feast.</p>
-
-<p>When the counsellor Farsight saw this, he
-went home, and lay down on his bed, and
-his heart broke, and he died. Then the king
-governed the kingdom himself, and lived for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-a long time in heavenly happiness with
-Moonlight.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When he had told this story, the goblin
-said: "O King, when the king was so
-happy, why should the counsellor's heart
-break? Was it from grief because he did
-not win the fairy himself? Or from sorrow
-because the king came back, and he could no
-longer act as king? If you know and will
-not tell me, then you will lose your virtue,
-and your head will go flying into a hundred
-pieces."</p>
-
-<p>And the king said to the goblin: "O
-magic creature, neither of these reasons would
-be possible for a high-minded counsellor.
-But he thought: 'The king used to neglect
-his duties for the sake of ordinary women.
-What will happen now, when he loves a
-fairy? In spite of all my efforts, a terrible
-misfortune has happened.' I think that was
-why his heart broke."</p>
-
-<p>Then the magic goblin went back to his
-tree in a moment. And the king was still
-determined to catch him, and went once
-more to the sissoo tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TWELFTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Brahman who died because Poison from
-a Snake in the Claws of a Hawk fell into
-a Dish of Food given him by a Charitable
-Woman. Who is to blame for his
-death?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back under the
-sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started as before. And
-as he walked along, the goblin said to him
-again: "O King, listen to a very condensed
-story."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Benares. In it lived
-a Brahman named Devaswami, whom the king
-honoured. He was very rich, and he had
-a son named Hariswami. This son had a
-wonderful wife, and her name was Beautiful.
-No doubt the Creator put together in her
-the priceless elements of charm and loveliness
-after his practice in making the nymphs of
-heaven.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One night Hariswami was sleeping on a
-balcony cooled by the rays of the moon.
-And a fairy prince named Love-speed was
-flying through the air, and as he passed he
-saw Beautiful asleep beside her husband. He
-took her, still asleep, and carried her off
-through the air.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Hariswami awoke, and not seeing
-the mistress of his life, he rose in anxiety.
-And he wondered: "Oh, where has my
-wife gone? Is she angry with me? Or is
-she playing hide-and-seek with me, to see
-how I will take it?" So he roamed anxiously
-all over the balcony during the rest of the
-night. But he did not find her, though he
-searched as far as the garden.</p>
-
-<p>Then he was overcome by his sorrow
-and sobbed convulsively. "Oh, Beautiful, my
-darling! Fair as the moon! White as the
-moonlight! Was the night jealous of your
-beauty; did she carry you away? Your
-loveliness shamed the moon who refreshed me
-with beams cool as sandal; but now that you
-are gone, the same beams torment me like
-blazing coals, like poisoned arrows!"</p>
-
-<p>And as Hariswami lamented thus, the night<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-came to an end, but his anguish did not end.
-The pleasant sun scattered the darkness, but
-could not scatter the blind darkness of
-Hariswami's madness. His pitiful lamentations
-increased a hundredfold, when the nightly
-cries of the birds ended. His relatives tried
-to comfort him, but he could not pluck up
-courage while his loved one was lost. He
-went here and there, sobbing out: "Here
-she stood. And here she bathed. And here
-she adorned herself. And here she played."</p>
-
-<p>His relatives and friends gave him good
-advice. "She is not dead," they said. "Why
-should you make way with yourself? You
-will surely find her. Pluck up courage and
-hunt for her. Nothing is impossible to the
-brave and determined man." And when
-they urged him, Hariswami after some days
-plucked up heart.</p>
-
-<p>He thought: "I will give all my fortune
-to the Brahmans, and then wander to holy
-places. Thus I will wear away my sins, and
-when my sins are gone, perhaps I shall find
-my darling in my wanderings." So he arose
-and bathed.</p>
-
-<p>On the next day he provided food and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-drink, and made a great feast for the
-Brahmans, and gave them all he had except
-his piety. Then he started to wander to holy
-places, hoping to find his wife.</p>
-
-<p>As he wandered, the summer came on him
-like a lion, the blazing sun its mouth, and the
-sunbeams its mane. And the hot wind blew,
-made hotter yet by the sighs of travellers
-separated from their wives. And the yellow
-mud dried and cracked, as if the lakes were
-broken-hearted at the loss of their lotuses.
-And the trees, filled with chirping birds,
-seemed to lament the absence of the spring,
-and their withering leaves seemed like lips that
-grow dry in the heat.</p>
-
-<p>At this time Hariswami was distressed by
-the heat and the loss of his wife, by hunger,
-thirst, and weariness. And as he sought for
-food, he came to a village. There he saw
-many Brahmans eating in the house of a
-Brahman named Lotus-belly, and he leaned
-against the doorpost, speechless and motionless.</p>
-
-<p>Then the good wife of that pious Brahman
-pitied him, and she thought: "Hunger is a
-heavy burden. It makes anyone light. Look
-at this hungry man standing with bowed head
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>at the door. He looks like a pious man who
-has come from a far country, and he is tired.
-Therefore he is a proper person for me to
-feed."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_146.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The summer came on him like a lion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So the good woman took in her hands a dish
-filled with excellent rice, melted butter, and
-candied sugar, and courteously gave it to him.
-And she said: "Go to the edge of our pond,
-and eat it."</p>
-
-<p>He thanked her, took the dish, went a little
-way, and set it down under a fig-tree on the
-edge of the pond. Then he washed his hands
-and feet in the pond, rinsed his mouth, and
-joyfully drew near to eat the good food.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment a hawk settled on the tree,
-carrying a black snake in his beak and claws.
-And the snake died in the grasp of the hawk,
-and his mouth opened, and a stream of poison
-came out. This poison fell into the dish of
-food.</p>
-
-<p>But Hariswami did not see it. He came up
-hungry, and ate it all. And immediately he
-felt the terrible effects of the poison. He
-stammered out: "Oh, when fate goes wrong,
-everything goes wrong. Even this rice and
-the milk and the melted butter and the candied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-sugar is poison to me." And he staggered up
-to the Brahman's wife and said: "Oh, Brahman's
-wife, I have been poisoned by the food
-you gave me. Bring a poison-doctor at once.
-Otherwise you will be the murderer of a
-Brahman."</p>
-
-<p>And the good woman was terribly agitated.
-But while she was running about to find a
-poison-doctor, Hariswami turned up his eyes
-and died. Thus, though she was not to blame,
-though she was really charitable, the poor wife
-was reproached by the angry Brahman who
-thought she had murdered her guest. She was
-falsely accused for a really good action. So
-she was dejected and went on a pilgrimage.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When he had told this story, the goblin
-said: "O King, who murdered the Brahman?
-the snake, or the hawk, or the woman who
-gave him the food, or her husband? This
-was discussed in the presence of the god of
-death, but they could not decide. Therefore, O
-King, do you say. Who killed the Brahman?
-Remember the curse, if you know and do not
-tell the truth."</p>
-
-<p>Then the king broke silence and said:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-"Who did the murder? The snake cannot be
-blamed, because he was being eaten by his
-enemy and could not help himself. The hawk
-was hungry and saw nothing. He was not to
-blame. And how can you blame either or
-both of the charitable people who gave food
-to a guest who arrived unexpectedly? They
-were quite virtuous, and cannot be blamed. I
-should say that the dead man himself was to
-blame, for he dared to accuse one of the
-others."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he jumped from
-the king's shoulder and escaped to the sissoo
-tree. And the king ran after him again, determined
-to catch him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>THIRTEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Girl who showed Great Devotion to the
-Thief. Did he weep or laugh?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the sissoo
-tree, put the goblin on his shoulder,
-and started. And as he walked along,
-the goblin said to him: "O King, I will tell
-you another story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Ayodhya, which was
-once the capital of Rama the exterminator of
-giants. In this city lived a strong-armed king
-named Hero-banner who protected the world
-as a wall protects a city. During his reign a
-great merchant named Jewel lived in the
-city. His wife was named Pleasing, and a
-daughter named Pearl was given to her
-prayers.</p>
-
-<p>As the girl grew up in her father's house,
-her natural virtues grew too: beauty, charm,
-and modesty. And thus she became a young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-woman. Now in her young womanhood she
-was asked in marriage not only by great
-merchants, but even by kings. But she was
-prudent and did not like men. She would not
-have loved a god if he had been her husband.
-She was ready to die at merely hearing talk of
-her marriage. So her father was silent on the
-subject, though his tender love for her made
-him sad. And the story was known everywhere
-in Ayodhya.</p>
-
-<p>At this time all the citizens were being
-plundered by thieves, and they petitioned King
-Hero-banner in these words: "O King, we
-are plundered every night by thieves, and cannot
-catch them. Your Majesty must decide
-what to do." So the king stationed night-watchmen
-in hiding about the city, to search
-out the thieves.</p>
-
-<p>When the watchmen failed to catch the
-thieves for all their searching, the king himself
-took his sword, and wandered about alone at
-night. And he saw a man creeping along a
-wall with noiseless steps, often casting a fearful
-glance behind him. The king concluded that
-this was the thief who all alone robbed the
-city, and went up to him. And the thief<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-asked him who he was. The king replied:
-"I am a thief."</p>
-
-<p>Then the thief said joyfully: "Good! You
-are my friend. Come to my house. I will
-treat you like a friend." So the king agreed
-and went with the thief to a house hidden in
-a grove and guarded by a wall, full of delightful
-and beautiful things, and bright with shining
-gems. There the thief offered the king a seat,
-and went into an inner room.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment a serving-maid came into
-the room and said to the king: "Your Majesty,
-why have you come into the jaws of death?
-This wonderful thief has gone out, intending
-to do you a mischief. He is certainly
-treacherous. Go away quickly."</p>
-
-<p>So the king quickly went away, returned to
-the city, and drew up a company of soldiers.
-With these soldiers he went and surrounded
-the house where the serving-maid had been.</p>
-
-<p>When the thief saw that the house was
-surrounded, he knew that he was betrayed,
-and came out to fight and die like a man.
-He showed more than human valour. He cut
-off the trunks of elephants, the legs of horses,
-and the heads of men; and he was all alone,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-with only his sword and shield. When the
-king saw that his army was destroyed, he ran
-forward himself.</p>
-
-<p>The king was a scientific swordsman, so
-with a turn of his wrist he sent the sword and
-the dagger flying from the thief's hand. Then
-he threw away his own sword, wrestled with
-the thief, threw him, and took him alive.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning the thief was led to the
-place of execution to be impaled, and the drums
-were beaten. And Pearl, the merchant's
-daughter, saw him from her balcony. All
-bloody and dusty as he was, she went mad with
-love, found her father, and said to him: "Father,
-I am going to marry that thief who is being led
-to execution. You must save him from the
-king. Otherwise I shall die with him."</p>
-
-<p>But her father said: "What do you mean,
-my daughter? That thief stole everything
-the citizens had, and the king's men are going
-to kill him. How can I save him from the
-king? Besides, what nonsense are you talking?"
-But the more he scolded, the more
-determined she became. And as he loved his
-daughter, he went to the king and offered all
-he had for the release of the thief.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_157.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">With a turn of the wrist he sent the dagger flying
-from the chief's hand.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the king would not be tempted by
-millions. He would not release the thief who
-stole everything, whom he had captured at the
-risk of his life. So the father returned home
-sadly. And the girl, not heeding the arguments
-of her relatives, took a bath, entered a
-litter, and went to the death-scene of the rogue,
-to die with him. Her parents and her relatives
-followed her, weeping.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the executioners impaled
-the thief. As his life ebbed away, he saw the
-girl and the people with her, and learned her
-story. Then the tears rolled down his cheeks,
-but he died with a smile on his lips.</p>
-
-<p>The faithful girl took the thief's body from
-the stake, and mounted the pyre to burn
-herself. But the blessed god Shiva was staying
-invisibly in the cemetery, and at that moment
-he spoke from the sky: "O faithful wife, I
-am pleased with your constancy to the husband
-of your choice. Choose whatever boon you
-will from me."</p>
-
-<p>The girl worshipped the gracious god and
-chose her boon: "O blessed one, my father has
-no son. May he have a hundred. Otherwise
-his childless life would end when I am gone."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And the god spoke again from the sky:
-"O faithful wife, your father shall have a
-hundred sons. But choose another boon. A
-woman faithful as you are deserves more than
-the little thing you asked."</p>
-
-<p>Then she said: "O god, if I have won
-your favour, may this my husband live and
-always be a good man."</p>
-
-<p>The invisible Shiva spoke from the sky:
-"So be it. Your husband shall be made alive
-and well. He shall be a good man, and King
-Hero-banner shall be pleased with him."</p>
-
-<p>Then the thief arose at once, alive and well.
-And the merchant Jewel was overjoyed and
-astonished. He took Pearl and the thief,
-his son-in-law, went home with his rejoicing
-relatives, and made a feast great as his own
-delight, in honour of the sons he was to have.</p>
-
-<p>And the king was pleased when he learned
-the story, and in recognition of the stupendous
-courage of the thief, he appointed him general
-at once. The thief reformed, married the
-merchant's daughter, and lived happily with
-her, devoted to virtue.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-reminded the king of the curse, and said:
-"O king, when the thief on the stake saw
-the merchant's daughter approaching with her
-father, did he weep or laugh? Tell me."</p>
-
-<p>And the king answered: "He thought:
-'I can make no return to this merchant for
-his unselfish friendship.' Therefore he wept
-from grief. And he also thought: 'Why
-does this girl reject kings and fall in love with
-a thief like me? How strange women are!'
-Therefore he laughed from astonishment."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he immediately
-slipped from the king's shoulder and escaped
-to his home. But the king was not discouraged.
-He followed him to the sissoo
-tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>FOURTEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Man who changed into a Woman at
-Will. Was his wife his or the other man's?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">So</span> the king went back as before under
-the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder, and started toward the monk.
-And as he walked along, the goblin told the
-king a story.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There was a city called Shivapur in Nepal.
-Long ago a king named Glory-banner lived
-there, and he deserved the name. He laid
-the burden of government on his counsellor
-named Ocean-of-Wisdom, and devoted himself
-to a life of pleasure with his wife Moonbright.</p>
-
-<p>In course of time a daughter named Moonlight
-was born to them, pleasing as the
-moonlight to the eyes of men. When she
-grew up, she went one day in spring with
-her servants to a festival in the garden.</p>
-
-<p>There she was seen by a Brahman youth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-named Master-mind, the son of Rich, who
-had come there to the festival. When he saw
-her plucking flowers with one arm uplifted,
-he went mad with love. His heart was taken
-captive by the gay maiden, and he was no
-longer master of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>He thought: "Is she the goddess of love,
-plucking the spring flowers in person? Or
-is she a forest goddess, come here to worship
-the spring-time?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the princess saw him, like a new god
-of love incarnate. The moment her eyes fell
-on him, she fell in love, forgetting her flowers
-and even her own limbs. While they looked
-at each other, lost in love like people in a
-picture, a great wail of anguish arose. They
-lifted their heads to learn what the matter was,
-and just then an elephant that had broken his
-chain, maddened by the scent of another mad
-elephant, came by, crushing the people in his
-path. He had thrown off his driver and the
-ankus hung from him as he ran. And everyone
-fled in terror.</p>
-
-<p>But the youth Master-mind ran up in a
-hurry and took the princess in his arms.
-And with a mixture of fear and love and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>modesty she half embraced him as he carried
-her far out of the elephant's path. Then her
-people gradually gathered, and she went to
-the palace, looking at the youth, and burning
-over the flame of love.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_164.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">An elephant came by, crushing the people in his path.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And the youth went home from the garden,
-and thought: "I cannot live, I cannot exist
-a moment without her. I must seek help
-from my teacher Root, who is a thorough
-rogue." And so the day slowly passed.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning he went to his teacher
-Root, and found him with his constant friend
-Moon. He drew near, bowed, and told his
-desire. And the teacher laughed and promised
-to help him.</p>
-
-<p>So that wonderful rogue put a magic pill
-in his mouth, and thus changed himself into
-an old Brahman. He put a second pill into
-Master-mind's mouth, which changed him
-into a lovely girl. Then that prince of rogues
-took him to the king and said: "O King,
-this maiden has come a long distance to marry
-my only son. But my son has gone away,
-and I am going to look for him. Please keep
-the girl. For you are a protector to be trusted
-while I am looking for my son."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The king was afraid of a curse, so he
-promised to do it. And summoning his
-daughter, he said: "Daughter, keep this
-maiden in your chamber, and let her live
-with you." So the girl took the Brahman
-youth Master-mind in his girl form to her
-own apartments.</p>
-
-<p>When Root had gone away, Master-mind
-in his girl form lived with his belovèd, and
-in a few days came to know her in an intimate
-and loving way, as girl friends do. Then
-when he saw that she was pining away and
-tossing on her couch, he asked the princess
-one evening: "My dear girl, why do you
-grow pale and thin day by day, grieving as
-if separated from your love? Tell me. Why
-not trust a loving, innocent girl like me? If
-you will not tell me, I shall starve myself."</p>
-
-<p>And the princess trusted him and said after
-a little hesitation: "My dear girl, why should
-I not trust you? Listen. I will tell you.
-One day I went to the spring festival in the
-garden. There I saw a handsome Brahman
-youth, fair as the moon but not so cold, the
-sight of whom kindled my love. For he
-adorned the garden as the spring-time does.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-While my eager eyes were feasting on his face,
-a great mad elephant that had broken his
-chain came charging and thundering past like
-a black cloud in the dry season. My servants
-scattered in terror, and I was helpless. But
-the Brahman youth took me in his arms and
-carried me far away. I seemed to be in a
-sandal bath, in a stream of nectar. I cannot
-tell how I felt as I touched him. Presently
-my servants gathered around, and I was
-brought here helpless. I felt as if I had fallen
-from heaven to earth. From that day I see
-in my thoughts my dear preserver beside me.
-I embrace him in my dreams. What need of
-more words? I wear away the time, thinking
-constantly of him and only him. The fire
-of separation from the lord of my life devours
-me day and night."</p>
-
-<p>When Master-mind heard these welcome
-words, he rejoiced and counted himself happy.
-And thinking the time to reveal himself had
-come, he took the pill from his mouth, and
-disclosed his natural form. And he said:
-"Beautiful maiden, I am he whom you
-bought and enslaved with a kindly glance
-in the garden. I was sick at the separation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-from you; so I took the form of a girl, and
-came here. So now bring heaven in a loving
-glance to my love-tortured heart."</p>
-
-<p>When the princess saw that the lord of her
-life was beside her, she was torn between love
-and wonder and modesty, and did not know
-what she ought to do. So they were secretly
-married and lived there in supreme happiness.
-Master-mind lived in a double form. By day
-he was a girl with the pill in his mouth, by
-night a man without the pill.</p>
-
-<p>After a time the brother-in-law of King
-Glory-banner gave his daughter with great
-pomp to a Brahman, the son of the counsellor
-Ocean-of-Wisdom. And the princess Moonlight
-was invited to her cousin's wedding and
-went to her uncle's house. And Master-mind
-went with her in his girl form.</p>
-
-<p>When the counsellor's son saw Master-mind
-in his lovely girl form, he was
-terribly smitten with the arrows of love.
-His heart was stolen by the sham girl, and
-he went home feeling lonely even with his
-wife. It made him crazy to think of
-that lovely face. When his father tried to
-soothe him, he woke from his madness and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-stammered out his insane desire. And his
-father was terribly distressed, knowing that
-all this depended on another.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king learned the story and came
-there. When the king saw his condition
-and perceived that he was seven parts gone
-in love, he said: "How can I give him the
-girl who was intrusted to me by the Brahman?
-Yet without her he will be ten parts
-gone in love, and will die. And if he dies,
-then his father, the counsellor, will die too.
-And if the counsellor perishes, my kingdom
-will perish. What shall I do?"</p>
-
-<p>He consulted his counsellors, and they said:
-"Your Majesty, the first duty of a king is
-the preservation of the virtue of his people.
-This is the fundamental principle, and is
-established as such among counsellors. If the
-counsellor is lost, the fundamental principle
-is lost; how then can virtue be preserved?
-So in this case it would be sinful to destroy
-the counsellor through his son. You must
-by all means avoid the loss of virtue which
-would ensue. Give the Brahman's girl to the
-counsellor's son. And when the Brahman returns,
-further measures will suggest themselves."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To this the king agreed, and promised to
-give the sham girl to the counsellor's son.
-So Master-mind in his girl form was brought
-from the chamber of the princess, and he
-said to the king: "Your Majesty, I was
-brought here by somebody for a given
-purpose. If you give me to somebody else,
-well and good. You are the king. Right
-and wrong depend on you. I will marry him
-to-day, but only on one condition. My
-husband shall go away immediately after the
-marriage and not return until he has been
-on a pilgrimage for six months. Otherwise
-I shall bite out my tongue."</p>
-
-<p>So the counsellor's son was summoned, and
-he joyfully assented. He made the man his
-wife at once, put the sham wife in a guarded
-room and started on a pilgrimage. So Master-mind
-lived there in his woman form.</p>
-
-<p>When he realized that the counsellor's son
-would soon return, Master-mind fled by night.
-And Root heard the story, and again assumed
-the form of an old Brahman. He took his
-friend Moon, went to Glory-banner, and said
-respectfully: "Your Majesty, I have brought
-my son. Pray give me my daughter-in-law."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The king was afraid of a curse, so he
-said: "Brahman, I do not know where your
-daughter-in-law has gone. Be merciful. To
-atone for my carelessness, I will give your
-son my own daughter."</p>
-
-<p>The prince of rogues in the form of an
-old Brahman angrily refused. But the king
-finally persuaded him, and with all due form
-married his daughter Moonlight to Moon,
-who pretended to be the old Brahman's son.
-Then Root went home with the bride and
-bridegroom.</p>
-
-<p>But then Master-mind came, and in the
-presence of Root a great dispute arose between
-him and Moon.</p>
-
-<p>Master-mind said: "Moonlight should be
-given to me. I married the girl first with
-my teacher's permission."</p>
-
-<p>Moon said: "Fool! What rights have
-you in my wife? Her father gave her to
-me in regular marriage."</p>
-
-<p>So they disputed about the princess whom
-one had won by fraud and the other by
-force. But they could reach no decision.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>O King, tell me. Whose wife is she?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-Resolve my doubts, and remember the agreement
-about your head.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king said: "I think she is the
-rightful wife of Moon. For she was married
-to him in the regular way by her father in
-the presence of her relatives. Master-mind
-married her secretly, like a thief. And when
-a thief takes things from other people, it is
-never right."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he went back
-home as before. And the king stuck to his
-purpose. He went back again, put the
-goblin on his shoulder, and started from the
-sissoo tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>FIFTEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Fairy Prince Cloud-chariot and the
-Serpent Shell-crest. Which is the more
-self-sacrificing?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">So</span> the king walked along with the goblin.
-And the goblin said: "O king, listen
-to a story the like of which was never
-heard."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a mountain called Himalaya where
-all gems are found. It is the king of
-mountains. Its proud loftiness is everywhere
-the theme of song. The sun himself has not
-seen its top.</p>
-
-<p>On its summit is a city called Golden City,
-brilliant like a heap of sunbeams left in trust
-by the sun. There lived a glorious fairy-king
-named Cloud-banner. In the garden of his
-palace was a wishing-tree which had come
-down to him from his ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>King Cloud-banner had worshipped the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-tree which was really a god, and by its grace
-had obtained a son named Cloud-chariot.
-This son remembered his former lives. He
-was destined to be a Buddha in a future
-life. He was generous, noble, merciful to all
-creatures, and obedient to his parents.</p>
-
-<p>When he grew up, the king anointed
-him crown prince, persuaded thereto by his
-counsellors as well as by the remarkable
-virtues of the youth. While Cloud-chariot
-was crown prince, his father's counsellors came
-to him one day and kindly said: "Crown
-prince, you must always honour this wishing-tree
-in your garden; for it yields all desires,
-and cannot be taken away by anybody. As
-long as it is favourably disposed to us, the
-king of the gods could not conquer us, and
-of course nobody else could."</p>
-
-<p>Then Cloud-chariot thought: "Alas! The
-men of old had this heavenly tree, yet they
-did not pluck from it any worthy fruit. They
-were mean-spirited. They simply begged it
-for some kind of wealth. And so they
-degraded themselves and the great tree too.
-But I will get from it the wish which is in
-my heart."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With this thought the noble creature went
-to his father. He showed such complete
-deference as to delight his father, then when his
-father was comfortably seated, he whispered:
-"Father, you know yourself that in this sea
-of life all possessions, including our own
-bodies, are uncertain as a rippling wave.
-Especially is money fleeting, uncertain, fickle
-as the twilight lightning. The only thing
-in life which does not perish is service. This
-gives birth to virtue and glory, twin witnesses
-through all the ages to come. Father! Why
-do we keep such a wishing-tree for the sake
-of transient blessings? Our ancestors clung
-to it, saying: 'It is mine, it is mine.' And
-where are they now? What is it to them,
-or they to it? Then, if you bid me, I will
-beg this generous wishing-tree for the one
-fruit that counts, the fruit of service to
-others."</p>
-
-<p>His father graciously assented, and Cloud-chariot
-went to the wishing-tree, and said:
-"O god, you have fulfilled the wishes of our
-fathers. Fulfil now my one single wish.
-Remove poverty from the world. A blessing
-be with you. Go. I give you to the needy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-world." And as Cloud-chariot bowed reverently,
-there came a voice from the tree:
-"I go, since you give me up." And the
-wishing-tree immediately flew from heaven and
-rained so much money on the earth that nobody
-was poor. And Cloud-chariot's reputation for
-universal benevolence was spread abroad.</p>
-
-<p>But all the relatives were jealous and envious.
-They thought that they could easily conquer
-Cloud-chariot and his father without the
-wishing-tree, and they prepared to fight to
-take away his kingdom. But Cloud-chariot
-said to his father: "Father, how can you
-take your weapons and fight? What high-minded
-man would want a kingdom after
-killing his relatives just for the sake of this
-wretched, perishable body? Let us abandon
-the kingdom, and go away somewhere to
-devote ourselves entirely to virtue. Then we
-shall be blessed in both worlds. And let these
-wretched relatives enjoy the kingdom which
-they hanker after."</p>
-
-<p>And Cloud-banner said: "My son, I only
-want the kingdom for you, and if you give it
-up from benevolent motives, what good is it
-to me? I am an old man."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So Cloud-chariot left the kingdom and went
-with his father and mother to the Malabar hills.
-There he built a hermit's retreat, and waited on
-his parents.</p>
-
-<p>One day, as he wandered about, he met
-Friend-wealth, the son of All-wealth, who
-lived there as king of the Siddhas. And
-Cloud-chariot spoke to him and made friends
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>Then one day Cloud-chariot saw a shrine to
-the goddess Gauri in the grove, and entered
-there. And he saw a slender, lovely maiden
-surrounded by her girl friends and playing on
-a lute, in honour of Gauri. The deer listened
-to her music and her song, motionless as
-if ashamed because her eyes were lovelier
-than their own. When Cloud-chariot saw the
-slender maiden, his heart was ravished.</p>
-
-<p>And he seemed to her to make the garden
-beautiful like the spring-time. A strange longing
-came over her. She became so helpless
-that her friends were alarmed.</p>
-
-<p>Then Cloud-chariot asked one of her friends:
-"My good girl, what is your friend's sweet
-name? What family does she adorn?"</p>
-
-<p>And the friend said: "This is Sandal, sister<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-of Friend-wealth, and daughter of the king of
-the Siddhas." Then she earnestly asked for
-the name and family of Cloud-chariot from a
-hermit's son who had come with him. And
-then she spoke to Sandal with words punctuated
-by smiles: "My dear, why do you not show
-hospitality to the fairy prince? He is a guest
-whom all the world would be glad to honour."</p>
-
-<p>But the bashful princess remained silent with
-downcast eyes. Then the friend said: "She
-is bashful. Accept a hospitable greeting from
-me." And she gave him a garland.</p>
-
-<p>Cloud-chariot, far gone in love, took the
-garland and put it around Sandal's neck. And
-the loving, sidelong glance which she gave him
-seemed like another garland of blue lotuses.
-So they pledged themselves without speaking a
-word.</p>
-
-<p>Then a serving-maid came and said to the
-princess: "Princess, your mother remembers
-you. Come at once." And she went slowly,
-after drawing from her lover's face a passionate
-glance, for which Love's arrow had wedged a
-path. And Cloud-chariot went to the hermitage,
-thinking of her; while she, sick with the
-separation from the lord of her life, saw her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-mother, then tottered to her bed and fell upon
-it. Her eyes were blinded as if by smoke from
-the fire of love within her, her limbs tossed in
-fever, she shed tears. And though her friends
-anointed her with sandal and fanned her with
-lotus-leaves, she found no rest on her bed or in
-the lap of a friend or on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Then when the day fled away with the
-passionate red twilight, and the moon drew
-near to kiss the face of the laughing East, she
-despaired of life, and her modesty would not
-let her send a message in spite of all her love.
-But somehow she lived through the night.
-And Cloud-chariot too was in anguish at the
-separation. Even in his bed he was fallen into
-the hand of Love. Though his passion was
-so recent, he had already grown pale. Though
-shame kept him silent, his looks told of the
-pangs of love. And so he passed the night.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning he arose and went to the
-shrine of Gauri. And his friend, the hermit's
-son, followed him and tried to comfort him.
-At that moment the lovelorn Sandal came out
-of her house alone, for she could not endure
-the separation, and crept to that lonely spot to
-end her life there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She did not see her lover behind a tree, and
-with eyes brimming with tears she prayed to
-the goddess Gauri: "O goddess, since I could
-not in this life have Cloud-chariot as my
-husband, grant that in another life at last
-he may be my husband."</p>
-
-<p>Then she tied her garment to the limb of
-an ashoka tree before the goddess and cried:
-"Alas, my lord! Alas, Cloud-chariot! They
-say your benevolence is universal. Why did
-you not save me?"</p>
-
-<p>But as she fastened the garment about her
-neck, a voice from the sky was heard in the
-air: "My daughter, do nothing rash. Cloud-chariot,
-the future king of the fairies, shall be
-your husband."</p>
-
-<p>And Cloud-chariot heard the heavenly voice,
-and with his friend approached his rejoicing
-sweetheart. The friend said to the girl:
-"Here is the gift which the goddess grants
-you." And Cloud-chariot spoke more than
-one tender word and loosed the garment from
-her neck with his own hand.</p>
-
-<p>Then a girl friend who had been gathering
-flowers there and had seen what was happening,
-came up joyfully and said, while Sandal's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-modest eyes seemed to be tracing a figure on
-the ground: "My dear, I congratulate you.
-Your wish is granted. This very day Prince
-Friend-wealth said in my presence to King
-All-wealth, your father: 'Father, the fairy
-prince Cloud-chariot, who deserves honour
-from all the world, who gave away the wishing-tree,
-is here, and we should treat him as an
-honoured guest. We could not find another
-bridegroom like him. So let us welcome him
-with the gift of Sandal who is a pearl of a
-girl.' And the king agreed, and your brother
-Friend-wealth has this moment gone to the
-hermitage of the noble prince. I think your
-marriage will soon take place. So go to your
-chamber, and let the noble prince go to his
-hermitage."</p>
-
-<p>So she went slowly and happily and lovingly.
-And Cloud-chariot hastened to the hermitage.
-There he greeted Friend-wealth and heard his
-message, and told him about his own birth and
-former life. Then Friend-wealth was delighted
-and told Cloud-chariot's parents who were
-also delighted. Then he went home and made
-his own parents happy with the news.</p>
-
-<p>That very day he invited Cloud-chariot to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-his home. And they made a great feast as
-was proper, and married the fairy prince and
-Sandal on the spot. Then Cloud-chariot was
-completely happy and spent some time there
-with his bride Sandal.</p>
-
-<p>One day he took a walk for pleasure about
-the hills with Friend-wealth, and came to the
-seashore. There he saw great heaps of bones,
-and he asked Friend-wealth: "What creatures
-did these heaps of bones belong to?" His
-brother-in-law Friend-wealth said to the
-merciful prince: "Listen, my friend. I will
-tell you the story briefly."</p>
-
-<p>Long ago Kadru, the mother of the serpents,
-made a wager with her rival Vinata, the
-mother of the great bird Garuda. She won
-the wager and enslaved her rival. Now
-Garuda's anger continued even after he had
-freed his mother from slavery. He kept going
-into the underworld where Kadru's offspring,
-the serpents, live, to eat them. Some he killed,
-others he crushed.</p>
-
-<p>Then Vasuki, king of the serpents, feared
-that in time all would be lost if the serpents
-were all to be slain thus. So he made an
-agreement with Garuda. He said: "O king<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-of birds, I will send one serpent every day to
-the shore of the southern sea for you to eat.
-But you are never to enter the underworld
-again. What advantage would it be to you
-if all the serpents were slain at once?" And
-Garuda agreed, with an eye to his own
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Since that time Garuda every day eats the
-snake sent by Vasuki here on the seashore.
-And these heaps of bones from the serpents
-that have been eaten, have in time formed a
-regular mountain.</p>
-
-<p>When Cloud-chariot heard this story from
-the lips of Friend-wealth, he was deeply
-grieved and said: "My friend, wretched indeed
-is that king Vasuki who deliberately sacrifices
-his own subjects to their enemy. He is a
-coward. He has a thousand heads, yet could
-not find a single mouth to say: 'O Garuda,
-eat me first.' How could he be so mean as to
-beg Garuda to destroy his own race? Or how
-can Garuda, the heavenly bird, do such a
-crime? Oh, insolent madness!"</p>
-
-<p>So the noble Cloud-chariot made up his
-mind that he would use his poor body that
-day to save the life of one serpent at least.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-At that moment a door-keeper, sent by Friend-wealth's
-father, came to summon them home.
-And Cloud-chariot said: "Do you go first.
-I will follow." So he dismissed Friend-wealth,
-and remained there himself.</p>
-
-<p>As he walked about waiting for the thing
-he hoped for, he heard a pitiful sound of weeping
-at a distance. He went a little way and
-saw near a lofty rock a sorrowful, handsome
-youth. He was at that moment abandoned
-by a creature that seemed to be a policeman,
-and was gently persuading his old, weeping
-mother to return. And Cloud-chariot wished
-to know who it might be. So he hid himself
-and listened, his heart melting with pity.</p>
-
-<p>The old mother was bowed down by
-anguish, and started to lament over the
-youth. "Oh, Shell-crest! Oh, my virtuous
-son, whom I fondled, not counting the labour
-and the pain! Oh, my son, my only son!
-Where shall I see you again? Oh, my darling!
-When your bright face is gone, your
-old father will fall into black despair. How
-can he live then? Your tender form is hurt
-by the rays of the sun. How can it bear
-the pangs of being eaten by Garuda? Oh,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-my unhappy fate! Why did the Creator
-and the serpent-king choose my only son
-from the broad serpent-world, and seize upon
-him?"</p>
-
-<p>And as she lamented, the youth, her son,
-said: "Mother, I am unhappy enough. Why
-torture me yet more? Return home. For
-the last time I bow before you. It is time
-for Garuda to come."</p>
-
-<p>And the mother cried: "Alas, alas for me!
-Who will save my son?" And she gazed
-about wildly and wept aloud.</p>
-
-<p>All this Cloud-chariot, the future Buddha,
-saw and heard. And with deep pity he
-thought: "Alas! This is a serpent named
-Shell-crest, sent here by Vasuki for Garuda
-to eat. And this is his mother, following
-him out of her great love. He is her only
-son, and she is mourning in pain and bitter
-anguish. I should forever curse my useless
-life if I did not save one in such agony at
-the cost of a body which must perish anyway
-some day."</p>
-
-<p>So Cloud-chariot joyfully approached and
-said to the old mother: "Serpent-mother, I
-will save your son. Do not weep."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the old mother thought that this was
-Garuda, and she screamed: "O Garuda, eat
-me! Eat me!"</p>
-
-<p>Then Shell-crest said: "Mother, this is
-not Garuda. Do not be alarmed. What a
-difference between one who soothes our feelings
-like the moon, and the fearful Garuda!"</p>
-
-<p>And Cloud-chariot said: "Mother, I am a
-fairy, come to save your son. I will put on
-his garment and offer my own body to the
-hungry bird. Do you take your son and
-go home."</p>
-
-<p>But the old mother said: "No, no. You
-are more than a son to me. To think that
-such as you should feel pity for such as
-we!"</p>
-
-<p>And Cloud-chariot answered: "Mother, I
-beg you not to disappoint me." But when he
-insisted, Shell-crest said: "Noble being, you
-have certainly shown compassion, but I do
-not wish to save my body at the expense of
-yours. Who would save a common stone at
-the cost of a pearl? The world is full of
-creatures like me, who are merciful only to
-themselves. But creatures like you, who are
-merciful to all the world, are very rare. Oh,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>pious being, I could not stain the pure family
-of Shell-guard, as the dark spot stains the
-disk of the moon."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_188.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">He climbed the rock of sacrifice, eager to give his life for another.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then Shell-crest said to his mother:
-"Mother, return from this desolate place.
-Do you not see the rock of sacrifice wet with
-the blood of serpents, the terrible plaything
-of Death? I will go for a moment to the
-shore and worship the god Shiva there.
-And I will return quickly before Garuda
-comes."</p>
-
-<p>So Shell-crest took leave of his mother and
-went to worship Shiva. And Cloud-chariot
-thought: "If Garuda should come in this
-interval, I should be happy."</p>
-
-<p>Then he saw the trees stiffening themselves
-against the wind made by the sweeping
-wings of the king of birds. "Garuda is
-coming," he thought, and climbed the rock
-of sacrifice, eager to give his life for
-another.</p>
-
-<p>And Garuda straightway pounced upon the
-noble creature and lifted him from the rock
-in his beak. While Cloud-chariot's blood
-flowed in streams and the gem fell from his
-forehead, Garuda carried him off and began<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-to eat him on the summit of the Malabar
-hills. And while he was being eaten, Cloud-chariot
-thought: "In every future life of
-mine may my body do some good to somebody.
-I would not attain heaven and salvation
-without doing some good first." Then
-a shower of flowers fell from heaven on the
-fairy prince.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the blood-stained gem from
-his forehead fell in front of his wife Sandal.
-She was in anguish at the sight, and as her
-parents-in-law were near, she tearfully showed
-it to them. And they were alarmed at the
-sight of their son's gem and wondered what
-it meant. Then King Cloud-banner discovered
-the truth by his magic arts, and he
-and his queen started to run with Cloud-chariot's
-wife Sandal.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Shell-crest returned from
-his worship of Shiva. He saw the rock
-stained with blood, and cried: "Alas for
-me, poor sinner! Surely that noble, merciful
-creature has given his body to Garuda in
-place of mine. I must find him. Where has
-the great being been carried by my enemy?
-If I find him alive, then I shall not sink into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-the slough of infamy." So he followed weeping
-the broad trail of blood.</p>
-
-<p>Now Garuda noticed that Cloud-chariot
-was happy while being eaten, and he thought:
-"This must be some strange, great being, for
-he is happy while I am eating him. He does
-not die, and what remains of him is thrilled
-with delight. And he turns a gracious, benevolent
-look upon me. Surely, he is no
-serpent, but some great spirit. I will stop
-eating him and ask him."</p>
-
-<p>But while he reflected, Cloud-chariot said:
-"O king of birds, why do you stop? There
-is still some flesh and blood on me, and I see
-that you are not satisfied. Pray continue to eat."</p>
-
-<p>When the king of birds heard these remarkable
-words, he said: "You are no serpent.
-Tell me who you are."</p>
-
-<p>But Cloud-chariot continued to urge him:
-"Certainly I am a serpent. What does the
-question mean? Continue your meal. What
-fool would begin a thing and then stop?"</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Shell-crest shouted from
-afar: "O Garuda, do not commit a great
-and reckless crime. What madness is this?
-He is not a serpent. I am the serpent."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And he ran between them and spoke again
-to the agitated bird: "O Garuda, what
-madness is this? Do you not see that I have
-the hood and the forked tongue? Do you
-not see how gentle his appearance is?"</p>
-
-<p>While he was speaking, Cloud-chariot's
-wife Sandal and his parents hurried up. And
-when his parents saw how he was lacerated,
-they wept aloud and lamented: "Alas, my
-son! Alas, Cloud-chariot! Alas for my
-merciful darling, who gave his life for
-others!"</p>
-
-<p>But when they cried: "Alas, Garuda!
-How could you do this thoughtless thing?"
-then Garuda was filled with remorse and
-thought: "Alas! How could I be mad
-enough to eat a future Buddha? This must
-be Cloud-chariot, who gives his life for others,
-whose fame is trumpeted abroad through all
-the world. If he is dead, I am a sinner, and
-ought to burn myself alive. Why does the
-fruit of the poison-tree of sin taste sweet?"</p>
-
-<p>While Garuda was thus deep in anxious
-thought, Cloud-chariot saw his relatives
-gathered, fell down, and died from the pain
-of his wounds. Then, while his grief-stricken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-parents were loudly lamenting, while Shell-crest
-was accusing himself, Sandal looked up
-to heaven and, in a voice stammering with
-tears, reproached the goddess Gauri who had
-graciously given her this husband: "Oh,
-Mother! You told me that the fairy prince
-should be my husband, but it is my fate that
-you spoke falsely."</p>
-
-<p>Then Gauri appeared in a visible form,
-and said: "Daughter, my words are not
-false." And she sprinkled Cloud-chariot with
-nectar from a jar. And straightway he stood
-up alive, unhurt and more beautiful than
-before.</p>
-
-<p>As they all bent low in worship, and Cloud-chariot
-rose only to bend again, the goddess
-said: "My son, I am pleased with your gift
-of your own body. With my own hand I
-anoint you king of the fairies." And she
-anointed Cloud-chariot with liquor from the
-jar, and then disappeared, followed by the
-worship of the company. And showers of
-heavenly blossoms fell from the sky, and the
-drums of the gods were joyfully beaten in
-heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Then Garuda reverently said to Cloud-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>chariot:
-"O King, I am pleased with your
-more than human character. For you have
-done a strange thing of unparalleled nobility,
-to be marvelled at throughout the universe,
-to be written upon the walls of heaven.
-Therefore I am at your service. Choose from
-me what boon you will."</p>
-
-<p>The noble creature said to Garuda: "O
-Garuda, you must repent and eat no more
-serpents. And you must restore to life those
-that you ate before, who now are nothing
-but bones."</p>
-
-<p>And Garuda said: "So be it. I will eat
-no serpents hereafter. And those that I have
-eaten shall come to life."</p>
-
-<p>Then all the serpents who had been eaten
-down to the bones, suddenly stood up. And
-through the grace of Gauri all the leading
-fairies learned immediately the wonderful deed
-of Cloud-chariot. So they all came and
-bowed at his feet and took him, freshly
-anointed by the very hand of Gauri, with his
-rejoicing relatives and friends to the Himalaya
-mountain. There Cloud-chariot lived happily
-with his father and his mother and his wife
-Sandal and Friend-wealth and the generous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-Shell-crest. And he ruled the fairy world
-radiant with gems.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this long, strange
-story, he said to the king: "O King, tell
-me. Which was the more self-sacrificing,
-Cloud-chariot or Shell-crest? If you know
-and do not tell, then the curse I mentioned
-before will be fulfilled."</p>
-
-<p>And the king said: "There was nothing
-remarkable in what Cloud-chariot did. He
-was prepared for it by the experiences of
-many past lives. But Shell-crest deserves
-praise. He was saved from death. His enemy
-had another victim, and was far away. Yet
-he ran after and offered his body to Garuda."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this, he went back
-to the sissoo tree. And the king returned to
-catch him again.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>SIXTEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The King who died for Love of his General's
-Wife; the General follows him in Death.
-Which is the more worthy?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back under the
-sissoo tree, put the goblin on his
-shoulder as before, and started. And
-the goblin said to him: "O King, I will
-tell you another little story to relieve your
-weariness. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Long ago there was a city named Golden
-City on the bank of the Ganges, where a
-quarter of the old perfect virtue still lingers
-in these evil days. There was a king named
-Glorious, and he deserved the name. His
-bravery kept the world from being overflowed,
-like the shore of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>In this king's city lived a great merchant,
-who had a daughter named Passion. Everyone
-who saw her fell in love and went mad
-with passion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When she grew to be a young woman, the
-virtuous merchant went to King Glorious
-and said: "Your Majesty, I have a daughter,
-the gem of the three worlds, and she is
-old enough to marry. I could not give her
-to anyone without consulting your Majesty.
-For you are the master of all gems in the
-world. Pray marry her and thus lay me
-under obligations."</p>
-
-<p>So the king sent his own Brahmans to
-examine her qualities. But when the Brahmans
-saw her supreme loveliness, they were
-troubled and thought: "If the king should
-marry her, his kingdom would be ruined.
-He would think only of her, and would
-doubtless neglect the kingdom. Therefore we
-must not report her good qualities to the
-king."</p>
-
-<p>So they returned to the king and said:
-"Your Majesty, she has bad qualities." So
-the king did not marry the merchant's
-daughter. But he bade the merchant give
-his daughter to a general named Force. And
-she lived happily with her husband in his
-house.</p>
-
-<p>After a time the lion of spring came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-dancing through the forest and slew the
-elephant of winter. And King Glorious went
-forth on the back of an elephant to
-see the spring festival. And the drum was
-beaten to warn virtuous women to stay
-within doors. Otherwise they would have
-fallen in love with his beauty, and lovesickness
-might be expected.</p>
-
-<p>But when Passion heard the drum, she did
-not like to be left alone. She went out on
-the balcony, that the king might see her.
-She seemed like the flame of love which the
-spring-time was fanning with southern breezes.
-And the king saw her, and his whole being
-was shaken. He felt her beauty sinking
-deep in his heart like a victorious arrow of
-Love, and he fainted.</p>
-
-<p>His servants brought him back to consciousness,
-and he returned to the city. There
-he made inquiries and learned that this was
-Passion whom he had rejected before. So
-he banished from the country the Brahmans
-who had said that she had bad qualities, and
-he thought longingly of her every day.</p>
-
-<p>And as he thought of her, he burned
-over the flame of love, and wasted away day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-and night. And though from shame he tried
-to conceal it, he finally told the reason of
-his anguish to responsible people who asked
-him.</p>
-
-<p>They said: "Do not suffer. Why do you
-not seize her?" But the virtuous king would
-not do it.</p>
-
-<p>Then General Force heard the story. He
-came and bowed at the feet of the king and
-said: "Your Majesty, she is the wife of your
-slave, therefore she is your slave. I give her
-to you of my own accord. Pray take my
-wife. Or better yet, I will leave her here in
-the palace. Then you cannot be blamed if
-you marry her." And the general begged
-and insisted.</p>
-
-<p>But the king became angry and said: "I
-am a king. How can I do such a wicked
-thing? If I should transgress, who would be
-virtuous? You are devoted to me. Why do
-you urge me to a sin which is pleasant for
-the moment, but causes great sorrow in the
-next world? If you abandon your wedded
-wife, I shall not pardon you. How could a
-man in my position overlook such a transgression?
-It is better to die." Thus the king<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-argued against it. For the truly great throw
-away life rather than virtue. And when all
-the citizens came together and urged him, he
-was steadfast and refused.</p>
-
-<p>So he slowly shrivelled away over the
-fever-flame of love and died. There was
-nothing left of King Glorious except his
-glory. And the general could not endure
-the death of his king. He burned himself
-alive. The actions of devoted men are
-blameless.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin on the king's shoulder
-had told this story, he asked the king: "O
-King, which of these two, the king and the
-general, was the more deserving? Remember
-the curse before you answer."</p>
-
-<p>The king said: "I think the king was the
-more deserving."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin said reproachfully: "O
-King, why was not the general better? He
-offered the king a wife like that, whose charms
-he knew from a long married life. And
-when his king died, he burned himself like
-a faithful man. But the king gave her up
-without really knowing her attractions."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then the king laughed and said: "True
-enough, but not surprising. The general was
-a gentleman born, and acted as he did from
-devotion to his superior. For servants must
-protect their masters even at the cost of their
-own lives. But kings are like mad elephants
-who cannot be goaded into obedience, who
-break the binding-chain of virtue. They
-are insolent, and their judgment trickles from
-them with the holy water of consecration.
-Their eyes are blinded by the hurricane of
-power, and they do not see the road. From
-the most ancient times, even the kings who
-conquered the world have been maddened by
-love and have fallen into misfortune. But
-this king, though he ruled the whole world,
-though he was maddened by the girl Passion,
-preferred to die rather than set his foot on
-the path of iniquity. He was a hero. He
-was the better of the two."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin escaped by magic from
-the king's shoulder and went back. And
-the king pursued him, undiscouraged. No
-great man stops in the middle of the hardest
-undertaking.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_205.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">"Shall I go into the fire or go home?"</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>SEVENTEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Youth who went through the Proper
-Ceremonies. Why did he fail to win the
-magic spell?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back through
-the night to the cemetery filled with
-ghouls, terrible with funeral piles that
-seemed like ghosts with wagging tongues of
-flame. But when he came to the sissoo tree,
-he was surprised to see a great many bodies
-hanging on the tree. They were all alike, and
-in each was a goblin twitching its limbs.</p>
-
-<p>And the king thought: "Ah, what does
-this mean? Why does that magic goblin
-keep wasting my time? For I do not know
-which of all these I ought to take. If I
-should not succeed in this night's endeavour,
-then I would burn myself alive rather than
-become a laughing-stock."</p>
-
-<p>But the goblin understood the king's
-purpose, and was pleased with his character.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-So he gave up his magic arts. Then the
-king saw only one goblin in one body. He
-took him down as before, put him on his
-shoulder, and started once more.</p>
-
-<p>And as he walked along, the goblin said:
-"O King, if you have no objections, I will
-tell you a story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Ujjain, whose people
-delight in noble happiness, and feel no longing
-for heaven. In that city there is real darkness
-at night, real intelligence in poetry, real
-madness in elephants, real coolness in pearls,
-sandal, and moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>There lived a king named Moonshine. He
-had as counsellor a famous Brahman named
-Heaven-lord, rich in money, rich in piety,
-rich in learning. And the counsellor had a
-son named Moon-lord.</p>
-
-<p>This son went one day to a great resort of
-gamblers to play. There the dice, beautiful
-as the eyes of gazelles, were being thrown
-constantly. And Calamity seemed to be
-looking on, thinking: "Whom shall I
-embrace?" And the loud shouts of angry
-gamblers seemed to suggest the question:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-"Who is there that would not be fleeced here,
-were he the god of wealth himself?"</p>
-
-<p>This hall the youth entered, and played
-with dice. He staked his clothes and everything
-else, and the gamblers won it all. Then
-he wagered money he did not have, and lost
-that. And when they asked him to pay, he
-could not. So the gambling-master caught
-him and beat him with clubs.</p>
-
-<p>When he was bruised all over by the clubs,
-the Brahman youth became motionless like a
-stone, and pretended to be dead, and waited.
-After he had lain thus for two or three days,
-the heartless gambling-master said to the
-gamblers: "He lies like a stone. Take him
-somewhere and throw him into a blind well.
-I will pay you the money he owes."</p>
-
-<p>So the gamblers picked Moon-lord up and
-went far into the forest, looking for a well.
-Then one old gambler said to the others: "He
-is as good as dead. What is the use of throwing
-him into a well now? We will leave him
-here and go back and say we have left him
-in a well." And all the rest agreed, and left
-him there, and went back.</p>
-
-<p>When they were gone, Moon-lord rose and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-entered a deserted temple to Shiva. When he
-had rested a little there, he thought in great
-anguish: "Ah, I trusted the rascally gamblers,
-and they cheated me. Where shall I go now,
-naked and dusty as I am? What would my
-father say if he saw me now, or any relative,
-or any friend? I will stay here for the
-present, and at night I will go out and try to
-find food somehow to appease my hunger."</p>
-
-<p>While he reflected in weariness and nakedness,
-the sun grew less hot and disappeared.
-Then a terrible hermit named Stake came
-there, and he had smeared his body with
-ashes. When he had seen Moon-lord and
-asked who he was and heard his story, he
-said, as the youth bent low before him: "Sir,
-you have come to my hermitage, a guest
-fainting with hunger. Rise, bathe, and partake
-of the meal I have gained by begging."</p>
-
-<p>Then Moon-lord said to him: "Holy sir,
-I am a Brahman. How can I partake of
-such a meal?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the hermit-magician went into his hut
-and out of tenderness to his guest he thought
-of a magic spell which grants all desires. And
-the spell appeared in bodily form, and said:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-"What shall I do?" And the hermit said:
-"Treat that man as an honoured guest."</p>
-
-<p>Then Moon-lord was astonished to see a
-golden palace rise before him and a grove with
-women in it. They came to him from the
-palace and said: "Sir, rise, come, bathe, eat,
-and meet our mistress." So they led him in
-and gave him a chance to bathe and anoint
-himself and dress. Then they led him to
-another room.</p>
-
-<p>There the youth saw a woman of wonderful
-beauty, whom the Creator must have made to
-see what he could do. She rose and offered
-him half of her seat. And he ate heavenly
-food and various fruits and chewed betel leaves
-and sat happily with her on the couch.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning he awoke and saw the
-temple to Shiva, but the heavenly creature was
-gone, and the palace, and the women in it.
-So he went out in distress, and the hermit in
-his hut smiled and asked him how he had
-spent the night. And he said: "Holy sir,
-through your kindness I spent a happy night,
-but I shall die without that heavenly creature."</p>
-
-<p>Then the hermit laughed and said: "Stay
-here. You shall have the same happiness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-again to-night." So Moon-lord enjoyed those
-delights every night through the favour of
-the hermit.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Moon-lord came to see what a
-mighty spell that was. So, driven on by his
-fate, he respectfully begged the hermit: "Holy
-sir, if you really feel pity for a poor suppliant
-like me, teach me that spell which has such
-power."</p>
-
-<p>And when he insisted, the hermit said:
-"You could never win the spell. One has to
-stand in the water to win it. And it weaves
-a net of magic to bewilder the man who is
-repeating the words, so that he cannot win it.
-For as he mumbles it, he seems to lead another
-life, first a baby, then a boy, then a youth,
-then a husband, then a father. And he falsely
-imagines that such and such people are his
-friends, such and such his enemies. He forgets
-his real life and his desire to win the spell.
-But if a man mumbles it constantly for twenty-four
-years, and remembers his own life, and is
-not deceived by the network of magic, and
-then at the end burns himself alive, he comes
-out of the water, and has real magic power.
-It comes only to a good pupil, and if a teacher<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-tries to teach it to a bad pupil, the teacher loses
-it too. Now you have the real benefit through
-my magic power. Why insist on more? If I
-lost my powers, then your happiness would
-go too."</p>
-
-<p>But Moon-lord said: "I can do anything.
-Do not fear, holy sir." And the hermit
-promised to teach him the spell. What will
-holy men not do out of regard to those who
-seek aid?</p>
-
-<p>So the hermit went to the river bank, and
-said: "My son, mumble the words of the
-spell. And while you are leading an imaginary
-life, you will at last be awakened by my
-magic. Then plunge into the magic fire
-which you will see. I will stand here on the
-bank while you mumble it."</p>
-
-<p>So he purified himself and purified Moon-lord
-and made him sip water, and then he
-taught him the magic spell. And Moon-lord
-bowed to his teacher on the bank, and plunged
-into the river.</p>
-
-<p>And as he mumbled the words of the spell
-in the water, he was bewildered by its magic.
-He forgot all about his past life, and went
-through another life. He was born in another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-city as the son of a Brahman. Then he
-grew up, was consecrated, and went to school.
-Then he took a wife, and after many experiences
-half pleasant, half painful, he found himself
-the father of a family. Then he lived for
-some years with his parents and his relatives,
-devoted to wife and children, and interested in
-many things.</p>
-
-<p>While he was experiencing all these labours
-of another life, the hermit took pity on him
-and repeated magic words to enlighten him.
-And Moon-lord was enlightened in the midst
-of his new life. He remembered himself and
-his teacher, and saw that the other life was
-a network of magic. So he prepared to enter
-the fire in order to win magic power.</p>
-
-<p>But older people and reliable people and his
-parents and his relatives tried to prevent him.
-In spite of them he hankered after heavenly
-pleasures, and went to the bank of a river
-where a funeral pile had been made ready.
-And his relatives went with him. But when
-he got there he saw that his old parents and
-his wife and his little children were weeping.</p>
-
-<p>And he was perplexed, and thought:
-"Alas! If I enter the fire, all these my own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-people will die. And I do not know whether
-my teacher's promise will come true or not.
-Shall I go into the fire, or go home? No,
-no. How could a teacher with such powers
-promise falsely? Indeed, I must enter the
-fire." And he did.</p>
-
-<p>And he was astonished to feel the fire as
-cool as snow, and lost his fear of it. Then
-he came out of the water of the river, and
-found himself on the bank. He saw his
-teacher standing there, and fell at his feet,
-and told him the whole story, ending with
-the blazing funeral pile.</p>
-
-<p>Then his teacher said: "My son, I think
-you must have made some mistake. Otherwise,
-why did the fire seem cool to you?
-That never happens in the winning of this
-magic spell."</p>
-
-<p>And Moon-lord said: "Holy sir, I do not
-remember making any mistake." Then his
-teacher was eager to know about it, so he
-tried to remember the spell himself. But it
-would not come to him or to his pupil. So
-they went away sad, having lost their magic.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-asked the king: "O King, explain the matter
-to me. Why did they lose their magic, when
-everything had been done according to
-precept?"</p>
-
-<p>Then the king said: "O magic creature, I
-see that you are only trying to waste my time.
-Still, I will tell you. Magic powers do not
-come to a man because he does things that are
-hard, but because he does things with a pure
-heart. The Brahman youth was defective at
-that point. He hesitated even when his mind
-was enlightened. Therefore he failed to win
-the magic. And the teacher lost his magic
-because he taught it to an unworthy pupil."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin went back to his home.
-And the king ran to find him, never hesitating.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>EIGHTEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Boy whom his Parents, the King, and the
-Giant conspired to Kill. Why did he laugh
-at the moment of death?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went to the sissoo tree,
-put the goblin on his shoulder as before,
-and started in silence. And the
-goblin on his shoulder saw that he was silent
-and said: "O King, why are you so obstinate?
-Go home. Spend the night in rest. You
-ought not to take me to that rascally monk.
-But if you insist, then I will tell you another
-story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Brilliant-peak. There
-lived a glorious king named Moon, who delighted
-the eyes of his subjects. Wise men
-said that he was brave, generous, and the very
-home of beauty. But in spite of all his wealth,
-he was very sad at heart. For he found no
-wife worthy of him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One day this king went with soldiers on
-horseback into a great wood, to hunt there and
-forget his sorrow. There he split open many
-boars with his arrows as the sun splits the black
-darkness, and made fierce lions into cushions
-for his arrows, and slew mountainous monsters
-with his terrible darts.</p>
-
-<p>As he hunted, he spurred his horse and beat
-him terribly. And the horse was so hurt by
-the spur and the whip that he could not tell
-rough from smooth. He dashed off quicker
-than the wind, and in a moment carried the
-king into another forest a hundred miles away.</p>
-
-<p>There the king lost his way, and as he
-wandered about wearily, he saw a great lake.
-He stopped there, unsaddled his horse, let him
-bathe and drink, and found him some grass in
-the shade of the trees. Then he bathed and
-drank himself, and when he had rested, he
-looked all about him.</p>
-
-<p>And he saw a hermit's daughter of marvellous
-beauty under an ashoka tree with another girl.
-She had no ornaments but flowers. She was
-charming even in a dress made of bark. She
-was particularly attractive because of her thick
-masses of hair arranged in a girlish way.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_218.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The giant laughed aloud, spit fire in his wrath, and
- showed his dreadful fangs.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And the king fell in love with her and
-thought: "Who is she? Is she a goddess
-come to bathe in these waters? Or Gauri,
-separated from her husband Shiva, leading a
-hard life to win him again? Or the lovely
-moon, taking a human form, and trying to
-be attractive in the daytime? I will go to her
-and find out."</p>
-
-<p>So he drew near to her. And when she saw
-him coming, she was astonished at his beauty
-and dropped her hands, which had been weaving
-a garland of flowers. And she thought:
-"Who can he be in this forest? Some fairy
-perhaps. Blessèd are my eyes this day."</p>
-
-<p>So she rose, modestly looking another way,
-and started to go away, though her limbs failed
-her. Then the king approached and said:
-"Beautiful maiden, I have come a long distance,
-and you never saw me before. I ask
-only to look at you, and you should welcome
-me. Is this hermit manners, to run away?"</p>
-
-<p>Then her clever friend made the king sit
-down and treated him as an honoured guest.
-And the king respectfully asked her: "My
-good girl, what happy family does your friend
-adorn? What are the syllables of her name,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-which must be a delight to the ear? Or why
-at her age does she torture a body as delicate as
-a flower with a hermit's life in a lonely wood?"</p>
-
-<p>And the friend answered: "Your Majesty,
-she is the daughter of the hermit Kanva and
-the heavenly nymph Menaka. She grew up
-here in the hermitage, and her name is Lotus-bloom.
-With her father's permission she came
-here to the lake to bathe. And her father's
-hermitage is not far from here."</p>
-
-<p>Then the king was delighted. He mounted
-his horse and rode to the hermitage of holy
-Kanva, to ask for the girl. And he entered
-the hermitage in modest garb, leaving his
-horse outside. Then he was surrounded by
-hermits with hoary crowns and bark garments
-like the trees, and saw the sage Kanva radiant
-and cool like the moon. And he drew near
-and fell at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>And the wise hermit greeted him and let
-him rest, then said: "My son Moon, I will
-tell you something to your advantage. Listen.
-I know what fear of death there is in mortal
-creatures. Why then do you uselessly kill the
-wild beasts? Warriors were made by the
-Creator to protect the timid. Therefore pro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>tect
-your subjects in righteousness, and root
-out evil. As Happiness flees before you,
-strive to overtake her with all your means,
-elephants and horses and things. Enjoy your
-kingship. Be generous. Become glorious.
-Abandon this vice of hunting, this sport of
-Death. For slayer and slain are equally deceived.
-Why spend your time in such an evil
-pursuit?"</p>
-
-<p>The sensible king was pleased and said:
-"Holy sir, I am instructed. And great is my
-gratitude for this instruction. From now on I
-hunt no more. Let the wild animals live without
-fear."</p>
-
-<p>Then the hermit said: "I am pleased with
-your protection of the animals. Choose any
-boon you will."</p>
-
-<p>Then the quick-witted king said: "Holy
-sir, if you are kindly disposed, give me your
-daughter Lotus-bloom."</p>
-
-<p>So the hermit gave him his daughter, the
-child of the nymph, who then came up after
-her bath. So they were married, and the king
-wore cheerful garments, and Lotus-bloom was
-adorned by the hermits' wives. And the weeping
-hermits accompanied them in procession to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-the edge of the hermitage. Then the king
-took his wife Lotus-bloom, mounted his horse,
-and started for his city.</p>
-
-<p>At last the sun, seeing the king tired with
-his long journeying, sank wearily behind the
-western mountain. And fawn-eyed night appeared,
-clad in the garment of darkness, like
-a woman going to meet her lover. And the
-king saw an ashvattha tree on the shore of a
-pond in a spot covered with grass and twigs,
-and he decided to spend the night there.</p>
-
-<p>So he dismounted, fed and watered his horse,
-brought water from the pond, and rested with
-his belovèd. And they passed the night there.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning he arose, performed his
-devotions, and prepared to set out with his wife
-to rejoin his soldiers. Then, like a cloud
-black as soot with tawny lightning-hair, there
-appeared a great giant. He wore a chaplet of
-human entrails, a cord of human hair, he was
-chewing the head of a man, and drinking blood
-from a skull.</p>
-
-<p>The giant laughed aloud, spit fire in his
-wrath, and showed his dreadful fangs. And
-he scolded the king and said: "Scoundrel! I
-am a giant named Flame-face. This tree is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-my home; even the gods do not dare to trespass
-here. But you and your wife have trespassed
-and enjoyed yourselves. Now swallow
-your own impudence, you rascal! You are
-lovesick, so I will split open your heart and eat
-it, and I will drink your blood."</p>
-
-<p>The king was frightened when he saw that
-the giant was invincible, and his wife was
-trembling, so he said respectfully: "I trespassed
-ignorantly. Forgive me. I am your guest,
-seeking protection in your hermitage. And I
-will give you a human sacrifice, so that you
-will be satisfied. Be merciful then and forget
-your anger."</p>
-
-<p>Then the giant forgot his anger, and thought:
-"Very well. Why not?" And he said: "O
-King, I want a noble, intelligent Brahman
-boy seven years old, who shall give himself up
-of his own accord for your sake. And when
-he is killed, his mother must hold his hands
-tightly to the ground, and his father must hold
-his feet, and you must cut off his head with
-your own sword. If you do this within seven
-days, then I will forgive the insult you have
-offered me. If not, I will kill you and all
-your people."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And the king was so frightened that he
-consented. Then the giant disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Then King Moon mounted his horse with
-his wife Lotus-bloom and rode away sad at
-heart, seeking for his soldiers. And he
-thought: "Alas! I was bewildered by hunting
-and by love, and I find myself ruined. Where
-can I find such a sacrifice for the giant? Well,
-I will go to my own city now, and see what
-happens."</p>
-
-<p>So he continued his search, and found his
-soldiers and his city Brilliant-peak. There
-his subjects were delighted because he had
-found a wife worthy of him, and they made a
-great feast. But it was a day of despondency
-and dreadful agony for the king.</p>
-
-<p>On the next day he told his counsellors the
-whole story. And one counsellor named Wise
-said: "Your Majesty, do not despair. I will
-find a victim for the sacrifice. The world is a
-strange place."</p>
-
-<p>Thus the counsellor comforted the king, and
-made a statue of a boy out of gold. And he
-sent the statue about the land, with constant
-beating of drums and this proclamation: "We
-want a noble Brahman boy seven years old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-who will offer himself as a sacrifice to a giant
-with the permission of his parents. And when
-he is killed, his mother must hold his hands,
-and his father must hold his feet. And as a
-reward, the king will give his parents a
-hundred villages and this statue of gold and
-gems."</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a Brahman boy on a farm,
-who was only seven years old, but wonderfully
-brave. He was of great beauty, and even in
-childhood he was always thinking about others.
-He said to the heralds: "Gentlemen, I will
-give you my body. Wait a moment. I will
-hurry back after telling my parents."</p>
-
-<p>So they told the boy to go. And he went
-into the house, bowed before his parents, and
-said: "Mother! Father! I am going to give
-this wretched body of mine in order to win
-lasting happiness. Pray permit me. And I
-will take the king's gift, this statue of myself
-made of gold and gems, and give it to you
-together with the hundred villages. Thus I
-will pay my debt to you, and do some real
-good. And you will never be poor again, and
-will have plenty more sons."</p>
-
-<p>But his parents immediately said: "Son,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-what are you saying? Have you the rheumatism?
-Or are you possessed by a devil? If
-not, why do you talk nonsense? Who would
-sacrifice his child for money? And what child
-would give his body?"</p>
-
-<p>But the boy said: "I am not mad. Listen.
-My words are full of sense. The body is the
-seat of unnameable impurities, it is loathsome
-and full of pain. It perishes in no long time
-at best. If some good can be done with the
-worthless thing, that is a great advantage in
-this weary life, so wise men say. And what
-good is there except helping others? If anyone
-can serve his parents so easily, then how
-lightly should the body be esteemed!"</p>
-
-<p>Thus the boy, with his bold words and his
-firm purpose, persuaded his grieving parents.
-And he went and got from the king's men
-the golden statue and the hundred villages,
-and gave them to his parents.</p>
-
-<p>So the boy with his parents followed the
-king's men to the city Brilliant-peak. And
-the king looked upon the brave boy as a
-magic jewel for his own preservation, and
-rejoiced greatly. He adorned the boy with
-garlands and perfumes, put him on an elephant,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-and took him with his parents to the home
-of the giant.</p>
-
-<p>There the priest traced a magic circle beside
-the tree, and reverently lit the holy fire.
-Then the horrible giant Flame-face appeared,
-mumbling words of his own. He staggered,
-for he was drunk with blood, and snorted and
-yawned. His eyes flashed fire and his shadow
-made the whole world dark.</p>
-
-<p>And the king said respectfully: "Great
-being, here is the human sacrifice you
-asked for, and this is the seventh day since
-I promised it. Be merciful. Accept this
-sacrifice."</p>
-
-<p>And the giant licked his chops, and looked
-the boy over, who was to be the sacrifice.
-Then the noble boy thought: "I have done
-some good with this body of mine. May I
-never rest in heaven or in eternal salvation,
-but may I have many lives in which to do
-some good with my body." And the air
-was filled with the chariots of gods who
-rained down flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Then the boy was laid before the giant.
-His mother held his hands, and his father
-held his feet. When the king drew his sword<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-and was ready to strike, the boy laughed so
-heartily that all of them, even the giant, forgot
-what they were doing, looked at the boy's
-face, and bowed low before him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this strange story,
-he asked the king: "O King, why did the
-boy laugh at the moment of death? I have a
-great curiosity about this point. If you know
-and will not tell, then your head will fly into
-a hundred pieces."</p>
-
-<p>And the king said: "Listen. I will tell
-you why the boy laughed. When danger
-comes to any weak creature, he cries for life
-to his mother and father. If they are not
-there, he begs protection from the king, whom
-heaven made his protector. Failing the king,
-he cries to a god. Some one of these should
-be his protector. But in the case of this boy
-everything was contrary. His parents held
-his hands and feet because they wanted money.
-And the king was ready to kill him with his
-own hand, to save his own life. And the
-giant, who is a kind of a god, had come there
-especially to eat him. So the boy thought:
-'They are ridiculously fooled about their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-bodies, which are fragile, worthless, the seat
-of pain and suffering. The bodies of the
-greatest gods perish. And such creatures as
-these imagine that their bodies will endure!'
-So when he saw their strange madness, and
-felt that his own wishes were fulfilled, the
-Brahman boy laughed in astonishment and
-delight."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin slipped from the king's
-shoulder and went back to his home. And
-the king followed with determination. The
-heart of a good man is like the heart of the
-ocean. It cannot be shaken.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>NINETEENTH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Man, his Wife, and her Lover, who all
-died for Love. Which was the most foolish?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back under the
-sissoo tree, took the goblin on his
-shoulder, and set out in haste. And
-as he walked along, the goblin on his shoulder
-said: "O King, I will tell you a story about
-a great love. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Ujjain, which seems
-like a divine city made by the Creator for the
-pious who have fallen from heaven. In this
-city there was a famous king named Lotus-belly.
-He delighted the good, and defeated
-the king of the demons.</p>
-
-<p>While he was king, a merchant named
-Fortune, richer than the god of wealth, lived
-in the city. He had one daughter named
-Love-cluster, who seemed the model from
-whom the Creator had made the nymphs of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-heaven. This merchant gave his daughter to
-a merchant named Jewel-guard from Copper
-City.</p>
-
-<p>As he was a tender father and had no other
-children, the merchant stayed with his daughter
-Love-cluster and her husband. Now Love-cluster
-came to hate Jewel-guard as a sick man
-hates a pungent, biting medicine. But the
-beautiful woman was dearer than life to her
-husband, dear as long-gathered wealth to a
-miser.</p>
-
-<p>One day Jewel-guard started for Copper
-City to pay a loving visit to his parents.
-Then the hot summer came, and the roads
-were blocked for travellers by the sharp arrows
-of the sun. The winds blew soft with the
-fragrance of jasmine and trumpet-flower, like
-sighs from the mouths of mountains separated
-from the spring-time. And wind-swept dust-clouds
-flew to the sky like messengers from
-the burning earth begging for clouds. And
-the feverish days moved slowly like wayfarers
-who cling to the shade of trees. And the
-nights clad in pale yellow moonlight became
-very feeble without the invigorating embrace of
-winter.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_235.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">A merchant named Fortune, richer than the God of Wealth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At this time Love-cluster, anointed with
-cooling sandal, and clad in thin garments,
-stood at her lattice-window. And she saw
-a handsome youth with a friend whom he
-trusted. He seemed the god of love born
-anew and seeking his bride. He was the son
-of the king's priest, and his name was Lotus-lake.</p>
-
-<p>And when Lotus-lake saw the lovely girl,
-he expanded with delight as lotuses in a lake
-expand at the sight of the moon. When the
-two young people saw each other, their hearts
-embraced each other at the bidding of Love,
-their teacher.</p>
-
-<p>So Lotus-lake was smitten with love, and
-was led home with difficulty by his friend.
-And Love-cluster was equally maddened by
-love. First she learned from her friend his
-name and home, then slowly withdrew to her
-room. There she thought of him and became
-feverish with love, simply tossing on her
-couch, seeing nothing and hearing nothing.</p>
-
-<p>After two or three days spent in this way,
-she felt bashful and fearful, pale and thin from
-the separation, and hopeless of union with her
-lover. So, as if drawn on by the moonbeam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-which shone through her window, she went
-out at night when her people were asleep,
-determined to die. And she came to a pool
-under a tree in her garden.</p>
-
-<p>There stood a family image of the goddess
-Gauri, set up by her father. She drew near
-to this image, bowed before the goddess,
-praised her, and said: "O Goddess, since I
-could not have Lotus-lake as my husband
-in this life, may he be my husband in some
-other life!" And she made a noose of her
-garment, and tied it to the ashoka tree before
-the goddess.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment her trusty friend awoke,
-and not finding her in the room, hunted about
-and came luckily into the garden. There
-she saw the girl fastening the noose about
-her neck, and she cried, "No, no!" And
-running up, she cut the noose.</p>
-
-<p>When Love-cluster saw that it was her own
-friend who had run up and taken the noose
-away, she fell to the ground in great agony.
-But her friend comforted her and asked the
-reason of her sorrow. Then she arose and
-said: "Jasmine, my friend, I cannot be united
-with him I love. I am dependent on my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-father and other people. Death is the happiest
-thing for me."</p>
-
-<p>And as she spoke, she was terribly scorched
-by the fiery darts of love, and determined
-to feel no more hope, and fainted. And her
-friend Jasmine lamented: "Alas! Love is a
-hard master. It has reduced her to this condition."
-But she gradually brought her back
-to life with cool water and fans and things.
-She made an easy bed of lotus-leaves. She
-put pearls cool as snow on her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Then Love-cluster came to herself and
-slowly said to her weeping friend: "My dear,
-the fire within me cannot be quenched by such
-things as pearls. If you want to save my life,
-be clever enough to bring my lover to me."</p>
-
-<p>And the loving Jasmine said: "My dear,
-the night is almost over. In the morning I
-will bring your lover here to meet you. Be
-brave and go now to your room."</p>
-
-<p>Love-cluster was contented. She took the
-pearls from her neck and gave them to her
-friend as a present. And she said: "Let us
-go now. Then in the morning you must
-keep your promise." So she went to her
-room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the morning Jasmine crept out without
-being seen to hunt for the house of Lotus-lake.
-When she got there, she found Lotus-lake
-under a tree in the garden. He was
-lying on a couch of lotus-leaves moistened
-with sandal, and the friend who knew his
-secret was fanning him with plantain-leaf fans,
-for he was tortured by the flames of love.
-And Jasmine hid, to find out whether this
-was lovesickness for her friend or not.</p>
-
-<p>Then the friend said to Lotus-lake: "My
-friend, comfort your heart by glancing a
-moment at this charming garden. Do not
-be so troubled."</p>
-
-<p>But he said to his friend: "My heart has
-been stolen by Love-cluster. It is no longer
-in my body. How can I comfort it? Love
-has made an empty quiver of me. So invent
-some plan by which I may meet the thief of
-my heart."</p>
-
-<p>Then Jasmine came out joyfully and without
-fear and showed herself. And she said: "Sir,
-Love-cluster has sent me to you, and I am
-the bearer of a message to you. Is it good
-manners to enter the heart of an innocent girl
-by force, steal her thoughts, and run away?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-It is strange, but the sweet girl is ready to give
-her person and her life to you, her charmer.
-For day and night she heaves sighs hot as the
-smoke from the fire of love that burns in her
-heart. And teardrops carry her rouge away
-and fall, like bees longing for the honey of
-her lotus-face. So, if you wish it, I will tell
-you what is good for both of you."</p>
-
-<p>And Lotus-lake said: "My good girl, the
-words which tell me that my love is lonely
-and longing, frighten me and comfort me.
-You are our only refuge. Devise a plan."</p>
-
-<p>And Jasmine answered: "This very night
-I will bring Love-cluster secretly to the garden.
-You must be outside. Then I will cleverly
-let you in, and so you two will be united."
-Thus Jasmine delighted the Brahman's son, and
-went away successful to please Love-cluster
-with the news.</p>
-
-<p>Then the sun and the daylight fled away,
-pursuing the twilight. And the East adorned
-her face with the moon. And the white night-blooming
-lotuses laughed, their faces expanding
-at the thought of the glory that was coming
-to them. At that hour the lover Lotus-lake
-came secretly, adorned and filled with longing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-to the garden-gate of his belovèd. And Jasmine
-led Love-cluster secretly into the garden,
-for she had lived through the day somehow.</p>
-
-<p>Then Jasmine made her sit down under the
-mango trees, while she went and let Lotus-lake
-in. So he entered and looked upon Love-cluster
-as the traveller looks upon the shade of
-trees with thick foliage. And as he drew near,
-she saw him and ran to him, for love took
-away her modesty, and she fell on his neck.
-"Where would you go? I have caught you,
-thief of my heart!" she cried. Then excessive
-joy stopped her breathing, and she died. She
-fell on the ground like a vine broken by the
-wind. Strange are the mysterious ways of
-Love.</p>
-
-<p>When Lotus-lake saw that terrible fall, he
-cried: "Oh, what does it mean?" And he
-fainted and fell down. Presently he came to
-himself, and took his darling on his lap. He
-embraced her and kissed her and wept terribly.
-He was so borne down by the terrible burden
-of grief that his own heart broke. And when
-they were both dead, the night seemed to die
-away in shame and fear.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the relatives heard the story<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-from the gardeners, and came there filled with
-timidity and wonder and grief and madness.
-They did not know what to do, but stood a
-long time with downcast eyes. Unfaithful
-women disgrace a family.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the husband Jewel-guard came
-back from his father's house in Copper City,
-filled with love for Love-cluster. When he
-came to his father-in-law's house and saw the
-business, he was blinded by tears and went
-thoughtfully into the garden. There he saw
-his wife dead in another man's arms, and his
-body was scorched by the flames of grief, and
-he died immediately.</p>
-
-<p>Then the whole household shouted and
-screamed so that all the citizens heard the story
-and came there. The demi-gods themselves
-were filled with pity and prayed to the goddess
-Gauri whose image had been set up there
-before by Love-cluster's father: "Oh, Mother,
-the merchant who set up this statue was always
-devoted to you. Show mercy to him in his
-affliction."</p>
-
-<p>And the gracious goddess heard their prayer.
-She said: "All three shall live again, and
-shall forget their love." Then through her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-grace they all arose like people waking from
-sleep. They were alive, and their love was
-gone. While all the people there rejoiced at
-what had happened, Lotus-lake went home,
-bending his head in shame. And the merchant
-took his shamefaced daughter and her husband
-and went into the house and made a feast.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story on
-the road in the night, he said: "O King,
-which was the most foolish among those who
-died for love? If you know and do not tell,
-you must remember the curse I spoke of
-before."</p>
-
-<p>Then the king answered: "O magic
-creature, Jewel-guard was the most foolish of
-them. When he saw that his wife had died
-for love of another man, he should have been
-angry. Instead, he was loving, and died of
-grief."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin slipped from the king's
-shoulder and quickly set out for his home.
-And the king ran after him again, eager as
-before.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TWENTIETH GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Four Brothers who brought a Dead Lion
-to Life. Which is to blame when he kills
-them all?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the
-sissoo tree, took the goblin, put him
-on his shoulder, and started for the
-place he wished to reach. And as he walked
-along the road, the goblin began to talk
-again: "Bravo, King! You are a remarkable
-character. So I will tell you another
-story, and a strange one. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a city called Flower-city. There
-lived a king named Earth-boar. In his kingdom
-was a farm where a Brahman lived
-whose name was Vishnuswami. His wife was
-named Swaha. And four sons were born to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>After a time the father died, and the
-relatives took all the money. So the four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-brothers consulted together: "There is nothing
-for us to do here. Suppose we go somewhere."
-And after a long journey they came to the
-house of their maternal grandfather in a
-village called Sacrifice. The grandfather was
-dead, but their uncles sheltered them, and they
-continued their studies.</p>
-
-<p>But they did not amount to much, so in
-time their uncles became scornful in such
-matters as food and clothing. And they
-were troubled.</p>
-
-<p>Then the eldest took the others aside and
-said: "Brothers, no man can do anything
-anywhere on earth. Now I was wandering
-about discouraged, and I came to a wood.
-There I saw to-day a dead man whose limbs
-lay relaxed on the ground. And I wished
-for the same fate, and I thought: 'He is
-happy. He is free from the burden of woe.'
-So I made up my mind to die, and hanged
-myself with a rope from a tree. I lost consciousness,
-but before the breath of life was
-gone, the cord was cut and I fell to the
-ground. And when I came to myself, I saw
-a compassionate man who had happened by
-at that moment, and he was fanning me with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-his garment. And he said to me: 'My friend,
-you are an educated man. Tell me why
-you are so despondent. The righteous man
-finds happiness, the unrighteous man finds
-unhappiness because of his unrighteousness,
-and for no other reason. If you made up
-your mind to this because of unhappiness,
-practise righteousness instead. Why seek the
-pains of hell by suicide?' Thus the man
-comforted me and went away. And I gave
-up the idea of suicide and came here. You
-see I could not even die when fate was unwilling.
-Now I shall burn my body at some
-holy place, that I may not again feel the
-woes of poverty."</p>
-
-<p>Then the younger brothers said to him:
-"Sir, why is an intelligent man sad for lack
-of money? Do you not know that money
-is uncertain as an autumn cloud? No matter
-how carefully won and guarded, three things
-are fickle and bring sorrow at the last: evil
-friendships, a flirt, and money. The resolute
-and sensible man should by all means acquire
-that virtue which brings him Happiness a
-captive in bonds."</p>
-
-<p>So the eldest brother straightway plucked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-up heart, and said: "What virtue is it which
-we should acquire?"</p>
-
-<p>Then they all reflected, and took counsel
-together: "We will wander over the earth,
-and each of us will learn some one science."
-So they appointed a place for meeting, and
-the four brothers started in four different
-directions.</p>
-
-<p>After a time they all gathered at the
-meeting-place, and asked one another what
-they had learned. The first said: "I have
-learned a science by which I can take the
-skeleton of any animal whatever and put the
-proper kind of flesh on it."</p>
-
-<p>The second said: "I have learned a science
-by which I can put on the flesh-covered
-skeleton the proper hair and skin."</p>
-
-<p>The third said: "My science is this. When
-the skin and the flesh and the hair are there,
-I can put in the eyes and the other organs
-of sense."</p>
-
-<p>The fourth said: "When the organs are
-there, I can give the creature the breath of
-life."</p>
-
-<p>So all four went into the forest to find a
-skeleton and test their various sciences. As
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>fate would have it, they found the skeleton
-of a lion there. And they took that, not
-knowing the difference.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_248.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The lion arose and killed his four creators.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first fitted out the skeleton with appropriate
-flesh. The second added the skin
-and hair. The third provided all the organs.
-The fourth gave life to the thing, and it was
-a lion. The lion arose with terrible massive
-mane, dreadful teeth in his mouth, and curving
-claws in his paws. He arose and killed
-his four creators, then ran into the forest.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Brahman youths all perished because
-they did wrong to make a lion. Who
-could expect a good result from creating a bad-tempered
-creature? Thus, if fate opposes, even
-a virtue that has been painfully acquired does
-not profit, but rather injures. But the tree of
-manhood, with the water of intelligence poured
-into its watering-trench of conduct about the
-vigorous root of fate, generally bears good fruit.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-asked the king who was walking through the
-night: "O King, remember the curse I
-mentioned, and tell me which of them was
-most to blame for creating the lion?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And the king reflected in silence: "He
-wants to escape again. Very well. I will
-catch him again." So he said: "The one
-who gave life to the lion, is the sinner. The
-others did not know what kind of an animal it
-was, and just showed their skill in creating flesh
-and skin and hair and organs. They were not
-to blame because they were ignorant. But the
-one who saw that it was a lion and gave it life
-just to exhibit his skill, he was guilty of the
-murder of Brahmans."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin went home. And the king
-followed him again, and came to the sissoo
-tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TWENTY-FIRST GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Old Hermit who exchanged his Body for
-that of the Dead Boy. Why did he weep
-and dance?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">Then</span> the king went back to the sissoo
-tree, put the goblin on his shoulder in
-spite of all its writhings, and set out in
-silence. And the goblin on his shoulder said:
-"O king of kings, you are terribly obstinate
-about this impossible task. So to amuse the
-weary journey I will tell a story. Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the Kalinga country was a city called
-Beautiful, where people lived as happily as in
-heaven. There ruled a famous king named
-Pradyumna. And in a part of this city was a
-region set apart by the king, where many
-Brahmans lived. Among them was a learned,
-wealthy, pious, hospitable Brahman named
-Sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>In his old age a single son was born to him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-and his worthy wife. The boy grew under
-the fostering care of his father, and showed
-signs of excellence. He was called Devasoma
-by his father, and his parents were entirely devoted
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>In his sixteenth year the boy attracted everyone
-by his learning and modesty. Then he
-suddenly fell ill of a fever and died. When
-his father and mother saw that he was really
-dead, they embraced the body and wept aloud.
-But their love for him would not permit them
-to burn the body.</p>
-
-<p>So the old relatives gathered, and said to
-the father: "Brahman, life is imaginary like
-a city in the sky. Do you not know this,
-you who know things above and things
-below? The kings who enjoyed themselves
-like gods upon the earth, they have gone one
-by one to cemeteries filled with processions of
-weeping ghosts. Their bodies were burned
-by the flesh-devouring fire and eaten by
-jackals. No one could prevent it in their
-case. How much less in the case of others?
-Therefore, as you are a wise man, tell us
-what you mean by embracing this dead
-body?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So at last the relatives persuaded him to
-let his son go, and they put the body in a
-litter and brought it to the cemetery with
-weeping and wailing.</p>
-
-<p>At that time a hermit was fulfilling a hard
-vow, and was living in a hut in the cemetery.
-He was very thin because of his age and his
-hard life. His veins stuck out like cords to
-bind him, as if afraid that he would break
-in pieces. His hair was tawny like the
-lightning.</p>
-
-<p>This hermit heard the wailing of the people,
-and turned to his pupil who begged food
-for him. Now this pupil was proud and
-arrogant. And the hermit said: "My boy,
-what is this wailing we hear? Go outside
-and find out, then return and tell me why
-this unheard-of commotion is taking place."</p>
-
-<p>But the pupil said: "I will not go. Go
-yourself. My hour for begging is passing
-by."</p>
-
-<p>Then the teacher said: "Fool! Glutton!
-What do you mean by your hour for begging?
-Only one half of the first watch of the day
-is gone."</p>
-
-<p>Then the bad pupil became angry and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-said: "Decrepit old man! I am not your
-pupil. And you are not my teacher. I am
-going away. Do your begging yourself."
-And he angrily threw down his staff and
-bowl before the old man, and got up, and
-went away.</p>
-
-<p>Then the hermit laughed. He left his
-hut and went to the place where the dead
-Brahman boy had been brought to be burned.
-He saw how the people mourned over such
-youthful freshness dead, and felt his own age
-and weakness. So he made up his mind to
-exchange his body for the other by magic.</p>
-
-<p>He went aside and wept at the top of his
-voice. Then he danced with all the proper
-gestures.</p>
-
-<p>After that, full of the longing to enjoy the
-happiness of youth, he left his own withered
-body by magic and entered the body of the
-Brahman youth. So the Brahman youth
-came to life on the funeral pyre and stood
-up. And a cry of joy arose from all the
-relatives: "See! The boy is alive! He is
-alive!"</p>
-
-<p>Then the magician in the body of the
-Brahman boy said to the relatives: "I went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-to the other world, and Shiva gave me life
-and directed me to perform a great vow. So
-now I am going off to perform the vow. If
-I do not, my life will not last. Do you
-then go home, and I will come later."</p>
-
-<p>So he spoke to those gathered there, having
-made up his mind what to do, and sent them
-home full of joy and grief. He went himself
-and threw his old body into a pit, and then
-went off, a young man.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-said to King Triple-victory, who was walking
-through the night: "O King, when the
-magician entered another person's body, why
-did he weep before doing it, or why did he
-dance? I have a great curiosity about this
-point."</p>
-
-<p>And the king was afraid of the curse, so he
-broke silence and said: "Listen, goblin. He
-thought: 'I am leaving to-day this body with
-which I won magic powers, the body which
-my parents petted when I was a child.' So
-first he wept from grief, and from love of
-his body which he found it hard to leave.
-Then he thought: 'With a new body I can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-learn more magic.' So he danced from joy
-at getting youth."</p>
-
-<p>When the goblin heard this answer, he
-returned quickly to the sissoo tree. And the
-king pursued him, undismayed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TWENTY-SECOND GOBLIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><em>The Father and Son who married Daughter
-and Mother. What relation were their
-children?</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">The</span> king paid no attention to the
-terrible witch of night, clad in black
-darkness, with the funeral piles as
-flaming eyes. He bravely went through the
-dreadful cemetery to the sissoo tree, put the
-goblin on his shoulder, and started as before.
-And as he walked along, the goblin said to
-him: "O King, I am very tired with these
-comings and goings, but you do not seem
-to be. So I will tell you my Great Puzzle.
-Listen."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Long ago there was a king named Virtue
-in the southern country. He was the best
-of righteous men, and was born in a great
-family. His wife came from the Malwa
-country, and her name was Moonlight. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-they had one daughter, whom they named
-Beauty.</p>
-
-<p>When this daughter was grown up, the
-relatives conspired to wreck the kingdom and
-drive King Virtue out. But he escaped by
-night, took a great many jewels, and fled from
-his kingdom with his beautiful wife and his
-daughter. He started for his father-in-law's
-house in Malwa, and came with his wife and
-daughter to the Vindhya forest. There they
-spent a weary night.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the blessèd sun arose in
-the east, stretching out his rays like hands
-to warn the king not to go into the forest
-where robbers lived. The king went on foot
-with his trembling daughter and his wife,
-and their feet were wounded by the thorny
-grass. So they came to a fortified village.
-It was like the city of Death; for there were
-no righteous people there, and it was filled with
-robber-men who killed and robbed other people.</p>
-
-<p>As the king drew near with his fine
-garments and his gems, many robbers saw
-him from a distance, and ran out armed to
-rob him. When the king saw them coming,
-he said to his wife and daughter: "These are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-wild men. They must not touch you. Go
-into the thick woods." So the queen with
-her daughter Beauty fled in fear into the
-middle of the forest.</p>
-
-<p>But the brave king took his sword and
-shield and killed many of the wild men as
-they charged down, raining arrows on him.
-Then their leader gave an order, and all the
-robbers fell on the king at once, wounded
-every limb in his body, and killed him; for
-he was all alone. So the robbers took the
-jewels and went away.</p>
-
-<p>Now the queen had hidden in a thicket,
-and had seen her husband killed. Then she
-fled a long distance in fear and came with her
-daughter into another thick wood. The rays
-of the midday sun were so fierce that travellers
-had to sit in the shade. So Queen Moonlight
-and Princess Beauty sat down under an ashoka
-tree near a lotus-pond in terrible weariness and
-fear and grief.</p>
-
-<p>Now a gentleman named Fierce-lion who
-lived near came on horseback with his son
-into that wood to hunt. The son's name was
-Strong-lion. And the father saw the footprints
-of the queen and the princess, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-said to his son: "My son, these footprints are
-clean-cut and ladylike. Let us follow them.
-And if we find two women, you shall marry
-one of them, whichever you choose."</p>
-
-<p>And the son Strong-lion said: "Father, the
-one who has the little feet in this line of
-footprints, seems to be the wife for me. The
-one with the bigger feet must be older. She
-is the wife for you."</p>
-
-<p>But Fierce-lion said: "My son, what do
-you mean? Your mother went to heaven
-before your eyes. When so good a wife is
-gone, how could I think of another?"</p>
-
-<p>But his son said: "Not so, Father. A
-householder's house is an empty place without
-a wife. Besides, you have surely heard what
-the poet says:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">'What fool would go into a house?</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">'Tis a prisoner's abode,</div>
- <div class="verse">Unless a buxom wife is there,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Looking down the road.'</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>So, Father, I beg you on my life to marry
-the second one, whom I have chosen for you."</p>
-
-<p>Then Fierce-lion said "Very well," and
-went on slowly with his son, following the
-footprints. And when he came to the pond,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-he saw Queen Moonlight, radiant with beauty
-and charm. And with his son he eagerly
-approached her. But when she saw him, she
-rose in terror, fearing that he was a robber.</p>
-
-<p>But her sensible daughter said: "There is
-no reason to fear. These two men are not
-robbers. They are two well-dressed gentlemen,
-who probably came here to hunt." Still the
-queen swung in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>Then Fierce-lion dismounted and stood
-before her. And he said: "Beautiful lady,
-do not be frightened. We came here to hunt.
-Pluck up heart and tell me without fear who
-you are. Why have you come into this lonely
-wood? For your appearance is that of ladies
-who wear gems and sit on pleasant balconies.
-And why should feet fit to saunter in a court,
-press this thorny ground? It is a strange
-sight. For the wind-blown dust settles on
-your faces and robs them of beauty. It hurts
-us to see the fierce rays of the sun fall upon
-such figures. Tell us your story. For our
-hearts are sadly grieved to see you in such a
-plight. And we cannot see how you could
-live in a forest filled with wild beasts."</p>
-
-<p>Then the queen sighed, and between shame<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-and grief she stammered out her story. And
-Fierce-lion saw that she had no husband to
-care for her. So he comforted her and soothed
-her with tender words, and took care of her
-and her daughter. His son helped the two
-ladies on horseback and led them to his own
-city, rich as the city of the god of wealth.
-And the queen seemed to be in another life.
-She was helpless and widowed and miserable.
-So she consented. What could she do, poor
-woman?</p>
-
-<p>Then, because the queen had smaller feet,
-the son Strong-lion married Queen Moonlight.
-And Fierce-lion, the father, married
-her daughter, the princess Beauty, because of
-the bigness of her feet. Who would break
-a promise that had been made solemnly?</p>
-
-<p>Thus, because of their inconsistent feet, the
-daughter became the wife of the father and
-the mother-in-law of her own mother. And
-the mother became the wife of the son and
-the daughter-in-law of her own daughter.
-And as time passed, sons and daughters were
-born to each pair.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the goblin had told this story, he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>asked the king: "O King, when children
-were born to the father and daughter, and
-other children to the son and mother, what
-relation were those children to one another?
-If you know and do not tell, then remember
-the curse I spoke of before."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_264.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">He comforted her and soothed her with tender words.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the king heard the goblin's question,
-he turned the thing this way and that, but
-could not say a word. So he went on in
-silence. And when the goblin saw that he
-could not answer the question, he laughed in
-his heart and thought: "This king cannot
-give an answer to my Great Puzzle. So he
-just walks on in silence. And he cannot
-deceive me because of the power of the curse.
-Well, I am pleased with his wonderful character.
-So I will cheat that rogue of a monk,
-and give the magic power he is striving after
-to this king."</p>
-
-<p>So the goblin said aloud: "O King, you
-are weary with your comings and goings in
-this dreadful cemetery in the black night, yet
-you seem happy, and never hesitate at all.
-I am astonished and pleased at your perseverance.
-So now you may take the dead
-body and go ahead. I will leave the body.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-And I will tell you something that will do
-you good, and you must do it. The monk
-for whom you are carrying this body, is a
-rogue. He will call upon me and worship
-me, and he will try to kill you as a sacrifice.
-He will say: 'Lie flat on the ground in an
-attitude of reverence.' O King, you must say
-to that rascal: 'I do not know this attitude
-of reverence. Show me first, and then I will
-do likewise.' Then when he lies on the
-ground to show you the attitude of reverence,
-cut off his head with your sword. Then you
-will get the kingship over the fairies which
-he is trying to get. Otherwise, the monk will
-kill you and get the magic power. That is
-why I have delayed you so long. Now go
-ahead, and win magic power."</p>
-
-<p>So the goblin left the body on the king's
-shoulder and went away. And the king reflected
-how the monk Patience was planning
-to hurt him. He took the body and joyfully
-went to the fig-tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CONCLUSION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-simple"><span class="smcap">So</span> King Triple-victory came to the monk
-Patience with the body on his shoulder.
-And he saw the monk alone in the
-dark night, sitting under the cemetery tree and
-looking down the road. He had made a
-magic circle with yellow powdered bones in a
-spot smeared with blood. In it he had put a
-jug filled with blood and lamps with magic oil.
-He had kindled a fire and brought together
-the things he needed for worship.</p>
-
-<p>The monk rose to greet the king who came
-carrying the body, and he said: "O King,
-you have done me a great favour, and a hard
-one. This is a strange business and a strange
-time and place for such as you. They say
-truly that you are the best of kings, for you
-serve others without thinking of yourself.
-This is the very thing that makes the greatness
-of a great man, when he does not give a thing
-up, though it costs his very life."</p>
-
-<p>So the monk felt sure that he was quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-successful, and he took the body from the
-king's shoulder. He bathed it and put garlands
-on it, and set it in the middle of the
-circle. Then he smeared his own body with
-ashes, put on a cord made of human hair,
-wrapped himself in dead men's clothes, and
-stood a moment, deep in thought. And the
-goblin was attracted by his thought into the
-body, and the monk worshipped him.</p>
-
-<p>First he offered liquor in a skull, then he
-gave him human teeth carefully cleaned, and
-human eyes and flesh. So he completed his
-worship, then he said to the king: "O King,
-fall flat on the ground before this master
-magician in an attitude of reverence, so that
-he may give you what you want."</p>
-
-<p>And the king remembered the words of the
-goblin. He said to the monk: "Holy sir, I
-do not know that attitude of reverence.
-Do you show me first, and afterwards I will
-do it in the same way."</p>
-
-<p>And when the monk fell on the ground to
-show the attitude of reverence, the king cut
-off his head with a sword, and cut out his
-heart and split it open. And he gave the head
-and the heart to the goblin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then all the little gods were delighted and
-cried: "Well done!" And the goblin was
-pleased and spoke to the king from the body
-he was living in: "O King, this monk was
-trying to become king of the fairies. But you
-shall be that when you have been king of the
-whole world."</p>
-
-<p>And the king answered the goblin: "O
-magic creature, if you are pleased with me, I
-have nothing more to wish for. Yet I ask
-you to make me one promise, that these
-twenty-two different, charming puzzle-stories
-shall be known all over the world and be
-received with honour."</p>
-
-<p>And the goblin answered: "O King, so be
-it. And I will tell you something more.
-Listen. When anyone tells or hears with
-proper respect even a part of these puzzle-stories,
-he shall be immediately free from sin. And
-wherever these stories are told, elves and giants
-and witches and goblins and imps shall have
-no power."</p>
-
-<p>Then the goblin left the dead body by
-magic, and went where he wanted to. Then
-Shiva appeared there with all the little gods,
-and he was well pleased. When the king<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-bowed before him, he said: "My son, you did
-well to kill this sham monk who tried by
-force to become king of the fairies. Therefore
-you shall establish the whole earth, and
-then become king of the fairies yourself. And
-when you have long enjoyed the delights of
-heaven and at last give them up of your own
-accord, then you shall be united with me. So
-receive from me this sword called Invincible.
-While you have it, everything you say will
-come true."</p>
-
-<p class="mb4">So Shiva gave him the magic sword, received
-his flowery words of worship, and
-vanished with the gods.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_001-274.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class='transnote mt4'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
-
-<p>Minor punctuation and printer errors repaired.</p>
-
-<p>Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as possible, including obsolete and variant spellings and other inconsistencies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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