Canto CXVI. The Meeting.

He looked upon that archer chief

Whose full eye mocked the lotus leaf,

And thus the noble Vánar spake:

“Now meet the queen for whose dear sake

Thy mighty task was first begun,

And now the glorious fruit is won.

O'erwhelmed with woe thy lady lies,

The hot tears streaming from her eyes.

And still the queen must long and pine

Until those eyes be turned to thine.”

But Ráma stood in pensive mood,

And gathering tears his eyes bedewed.

His sad looks sought the ground: he sighed

And thus to King Vibhishaṇ cried:

“Let Sítá bathe and tire her head

And hither to my sight be led

In raiment sweet with precious scent,

And gay with golden ornament.”

The Rákshas king his palace sought,

And Sítá from her bower was brought.

Then Rákshas bearers tall and strong,

Selected from the menial throng,

Through Lanká's gate the queen, arrayed

In glorious robes and gems, conveyed.

Concealed behind the silken screen,

Swift to the plain they bore the queen,

While Vánars, close on every side,

With eager looks the litter eyed.

The warders at Vibhishaṇ's hest

The onward rushing throng repressed,

While like the roar of ocean loud

Rose the wild murmur of the crowd.

The son of Raghu saw and moved

With anger thus the king reproved:

“Why vex with hasty blow and threat

The Vánars, and my rights forget?

Repress this zeal, untimely shown:

I count this people as mine own.

A woman's guard is not her bower,

The lofty wall, the fenced tower:

Her conduct is her best defence,

And not a king's magnificence.

At holy rites, in war and woe,

Her face unveiled a dame may show;

When at the Maiden's Choice[1015] they meet,

When marriage troops parade the street.

And she, my queen, who long has lain

In prison racked with care and pain,

May cease a while her face to hide,

For is not Ráma by her side?

Lay down the litter: on her feet

Let Sítá come her lord to meet.

And let the hosts of woodland race

Look near upon the lady's face.”

Then Lakshmaṇ and each Vánar chief

Who heard his words were filled with grief.

The lady's gentle spirit sank,

And from each eye in fear she shrank,

As, her sweet eyelids veiled for shame,

Slowly before her lord she came.

While rapture battled with surprise

She raised to his her wistful eyes.

Then with her doubt and fear she strove,

And from her breast all sorrow drove.

Regardless of the gathering crowd,

Bright as the moon without a cloud,

She bent her eyes, no longer dim,

In joy and trusting love on him.