The RÁMÁYAN of VÁLMÍKI - Part 1 - 41 in English Spiritual Stories by MB (Official) books and stories PDF | The RÁMÁYAN of VÁLMÍKI - Part 1 - 41

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The RÁMÁYAN of VÁLMÍKI - Part 1 - 41

Canto XLIII.Bhagírath.

When Sagar thus had bowed to fate,

The lords and commons of the state

Approved with ready heart and will

Prince Anśumán his throne to fill.

He ruled,a mighty king,unblamed,

Sire of Dilípa justly famed.

To him,his child and worthy heir,

The king resigned his kingdom's care,

And on Himálaya's pleasant side

His task austere of penance plied.

Bright as a God in clear renown

He planned to bring pure Gangádown.

There on his fruitless hope intent

Twice sixteen thousand years he spent,

And in the grove of hermits stayed

Till bliss in heaven his rites repaid.

Dilípa then,the good and great,

Soon as he learnt his kinsmen's fate,

Bowed down by woe,with troubled mind,

Pondering long no cure could find.

“How can I bring,”the mourner sighed,

“To cleanse their dust,the heavenly tide?

How can I give them rest,and save

Their spirits with the offered wave?”

Long with this thought his bosom skilled

In holy discipline was filled.

A son was born,Bhagírath named,

Above all men for virtue famed.

Dilípa many a rite ordained,

And thirty thousand seasons reigned.

But when no hope the king could see

His kinsmen from their woe to free,

The lord of men,by sickness tried,

Obeyed the law of fate,and died;

He left the kingdom to his son,

And gained the heaven his deeds had won.

The good Bhagírath,royal sage,

Had no fair son to cheer his age.

He,great in glory,pure in will,

Longing for sons was childless still.

Then on one wish,one thought intent,

Planning the heavenly stream's descent,

Leaving his ministers the care

And burden of his state to bear,

Dwelling in far Gokarna194he

Engaged in long austerity.

With senses checked,with arms upraised,

Five fires195around and o'er him blazed.

Each weary month the hermit passed

Breaking but once his awful fast.

In winter's chill the brook his bed,

In rain,the clouds to screen his head.

Thousands of years he thus endured

Till Brahmá's favour was assured,

And the high Lord of living things

Looked kindly on his sufferings.

With trooping Gods the Sire came near

The king who plied his task austere:

“Blest Monarch,of a glorious race,

Thy fervent rites have won my grace.

Well hast thou wrought thine awful task:

Some boon in turn,O Hermit,ask.”

Bhagírath,rich in glory's light,

The hero with the arm of might,

Thus to the Lord of earth and sky

Raised suppliant hands and made reply:

“If the great God his favour deigns,

And my long toil its fruit obtains,

Let Sagar's sons receive from me

Libations that they long to see.

Let Gangáwith her holy wave

The ashes of the heroes lave,

That so my kinsmen may ascend

To heavenly bliss that ne'er shall end.

And give,I pray,O God,a son,

Nor let my house be all undone.

Sire of the worlds!be this the grace

Bestowed upon Ikshváku's race.”

The Sire,when thus the king had prayed,

In sweet kind words his answer made.

“High,high thy thought and wishes are,

Bhagírath of the mighty car!

Ikshváku's line is blest in thee,

And as thou prayest it shall be.

Gangá,whose waves in Swarga196flow,

Is daughter of the Lord of Snow.

WinŚiva that his aid be lent

To hold her in her mid descent,

For earth alone will never bear

Those torrents hurled from upper air;

And none may hold her weight but He,

The Trident wielding deity.”

Thus having said,the Lord supreme

Addressed him to the heavenly stream;

And then with Gods and Maruts197went

To heaven above the firmament.