Canto IX. The Ladies' Bower.

Where stately mansions rose around,

A palace fairer still he found,

Whose royal height and splendour showed

Where Rávaṇ's self, the king, abode.

A chosen band with bow and sword

Guarded the palace of their lord,

Where Ráksha's dames of noble race

And many a princess fair of face

Whom Rávaṇ's arm had torn away

From vanquished kings in slumber lay.

There jewelled arches high o'erhead

An ever-changing lustre shed

From ruby, pearl, and every gem

On golden pillars under them.

Delicious came the tempered air

That breathed a heavenly summer there,

Stealing through bloomy trees that bore

Each pleasant fruit in endless store.

No check was there from jealous guard,

No door was fast, no portal barred;

Only a sweet air breathed to meet

The stranger, as a host should greet

A wanderer of his kith and kin

And woo his weary steps within.

He stood within a spacious hall

With fretted roof and painted wall,

The giant Rávaṇ's boast and pride,

Loved even as a lovely bride.

'Twere long to tell each marvel there,

The crystal floor, the jewelled stair,

The gold, the silver, and the shine

Of chrysolite and almandine.

There breathed the fairest blooms of spring;

There flashed the proud swan's silver wing,

The splendour of whose feathers broke

Through fragrant wreaths of aloe smoke.

“'Tis Indra's heaven,” the Vánar cried,

Gazing in joy from side to side;

“The home of all the Gods is this,

The mansion of eternal bliss.”

There were the softest carpets spread,

Delightful to the sight and tread,

Where many a lovely woman lay

O'ercome by sleep, fatigued with play.

The wine no longer cheered the feast,

The sound of revelry had ceased.

The tinkling feet no longer stirred,

No chiming of a zone was heard.

So when each bird has sought her nest,

And swans are mute and wild bees rest,

Sleep the fair lilies on the lake

Till the sun's kiss shall bid them wake.

Like the calm field of winter's sky

Which stars unnumbered glorify,

So shone and glowed the sumptuous room

With living stars that chased the gloom.

“These are the stars,” the chieftain cried,

“In autumn nights that earth-ward glide,

In brighter forms to reappear

And shine in matchless lustre here.”

With wondering eyes a while he viewed

Each graceful form and attitude.

One lady's head was backward thrown,

Bare was her arm and loose her zone.

The garland that her brow had graced

Hung closely round another's waist.

Here gleamed two little feet all bare

Of anklets that had sparkled there,

Here lay a queenly dame at rest

In all her glorious garments dressed.

There slept another whose small hand

Had loosened every tie and band,

In careless grace another lay

With gems and jewels cast away,

Like a young creeper when the tread

Of the wild elephant has spread

Confusion and destruction round,

And cast it flowerless to the ground.

Here lay a slumberer still as death,

Save only that her balmy breath

Raised ever and anon the lace

That floated o'er her sleeping face.

There, sunk in sleep, an amorous maid

Her sweet head on a mirror laid,

Like a fair lily bending till

Her petals rest upon the rill.

Another black-eyed damsel pressed

Her lute upon her heaving breast,

As though her loving arms were twined

Round him for whom her bosom pined.

Another pretty sleeper round

A silver vase her arms had wound,

That seemed, so fresh and fair and young

A wreath of flowers that o'er it hung.

In sweet disorder lay a throng

Weary of dance and play and song,

Where heedless girls had sunk to rest

One pillowed on another's breast,

Her tender cheek half seen beneath

Bed roses of the falling wreath,

The while her long soft hair concealed

The beauties that her friend revealed.

With limbs at random interlaced

Round arm and leg and throat and waist,

That wreath of women lay asleep

Like blossoms in a careless heap.