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The Rāmāyana, Volume 2. Āranya, Kishkindhā, and Sundara Kāndam cover

The Rāmāyana, Volume 2. Āranya, Kishkindhā, and Sundara Kāndam

Chapter 142: SECTION LXIII.
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The narrative follows an exiled prince, his devoted wife, and his faithful brother as they take refuge in an expansive sacred forest and encounter ascetics, wild creatures, and hostile rakshasas. It recounts perilous episodes in the woods, including the abduction of the wife and violent confrontations with demonic foes. The action then moves to the politics and exploits of a simian realm, where the prince forges an alliance with an exiled monkey leader and marshals aid. A bold emissary undertakes a daring reconnaissance that locates the captive and performs extraordinary feats on the way. The volume closes with preparations for a large-scale campaign to rescue the captive and restore righteous order, exploring duty, loyalty, and devotion.

SECTION LXIII.

Having praised me with these and many other words, and bidden me adieu that one skilled in speech, entered his own habitation. Issuing out gently from the cave of that mountain, I, ascending Vindhya, was expecting you. The space covered by the time intervening between then and to-day is a little over an hundred years;195 and laying up in my heart the speech of that ascetic, I have been awaiting season and place. Setting out on his great journey, on Niçākara having gone to heaven, I distracted with various thoughts, have been consumed by grief.196 My rising intention of doing away with myself I have suppressed in consideration of the words of the ascetic. The reason which he had imparted unto me for preserving my life, hath removed my pains, even as a flaming fire (dispells darkness). And knowing the prowess of the impious Rāvana, I said in rage to my son, versed in speech,—'Hearing her lamentation, and knowing them197 bereft of Sitā, why didst thou not deliver her?' My son did not do this good office unto Daçaratha, influenced by affection for him." As he was speaking thus in the midst of the monkeys, his wings sprang up in presence of the rangers of the forest. Thereupon, seeing his person furnished with grown pinions hued like the infant sun, he experienced incomparable raptures, and addressed the monkeys, saying,— "By the grace of that Rāyarshi of immeasurable energy, my wings, which had been burnt up by the rays of the sun, have grown again. To-day I have got (back) the strength and prowess which I possessed while my youth was yet present. Do ye strive every way. Ye shall meet with Sitā. And my getting (back) my wings inspires (us) with confidence as to success." Having said this unto all the monkeys, that ranger of the sky and best of birds. Sampāti, anxious to ascertain his power of flight, flew up from the mountain summits. Hearing his words, those powerful monkeys, with vigour (enhanced), seeing success before them, felt the height of joy. Then those foremost of monkeys, in vigor resembling the Wind, getting occasion for displaying their prowess, intent wpon searching the Janaka's daughter, set forward towards the quarter crested by Abhijit.198