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The flame-gatherers

Chapter 4: BOOK I FLESH-FIRE
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About This Book

Set on the Narmáda plain and the plateau of Mandu, the novel follows a Rajah's return from campaign and interweaves episodes of power, passion, and spiritual seeking, organized into two parts—Flesh-Fire and Soul-Fire. Early chapters depict conquest, court life, and a passionate love connected to an Asra figure and a ruby; later sections shift toward asceticism, moral struggle, and pilgrimage, examining cultural encounters, fate, and the tension between sensual desire and spiritual awakening. The narrative balances vivid landscape and ritual detail with inner conflict as characters confront longing, exile, and the search for truth.

BOOK I
FLESH-FIRE

“Daily walked, in radiant beauty,
To and fro, the Sultan’s daughter;
In the twilight, where the fountain
Ripples o’er with crystal water.
Day by day the youthful slave stood
In the twilight, where the fountain
Ripples o’er with crystal water.
Daily he grew pale and paler.
“Once at evening came the Princess
To his side, with hurried accents:
‘Tell thy name, for I would know it;
And thy home, thy sire, and kindred.’
“And the slave replied:
‘My name is Mahomet. I come from Yemen,
And my race is the race of Asra,
Who must die if love they cherish!’”
Heinrich Heine, “The Asra.”