Canto XLIV. Márícha's Death.

Thus having warned his brother bold

He grasped his sword with haft of gold,

And bow with triple flexure bent,

His own delight and ornament;

Then bound two quivers to his side,

And hurried forth with eager stride.

Soon as the antlered monarch saw

The lord of monarchs near him draw,

A while with trembling heart he fled,

Then turned and showed his stately head.

With sword and bow the chief pursued

Where'er the fleeing deer he viewed

Sending from dell and lone recess

The splendour of his loveliness.

Now full in view the creature stood

Now vanished in the depth of wood;

Now running with a languid flight,

Now like a meteor lost to sight.

With trembling limbs away he sped;

Then like the moon with clouds o'erspread

Gleamed for a moment bright between

The trees, and was again unseen.

Thus in the magic deer's disguise

Márícha lured him to the prize,

And seen a while, then lost to view,

Far from his cot the hero drew.

Still by the flying game deceived

The hunter's heart was wroth and grieved,

And wearied with the fruitless chase

He stayed him in a shady place.

Again the rover of the night

Enraged the chieftain, full in sight,

Slow moving in the coppice near,

Surrounded by the woodland deer.

Again the hunter sought the game

That seemed a while to court his aim:

But seized again with sudden dread,

Beyond his sight the creature fled.

Again the hero left the shade,

Again the deer before him strayed.

With surer hope and stronger will

The hunter longed his prey to kill.

Then as his soul impatient grew,

An arrow from his side he drew,

Resplendent at the sunbeam's glow,

The crusher of the smitten foe.

With skillful heed the mighty lord

Fixed well shaft and strained the cord.

Upon the deer his eyes he bent,

And like a fiery serpent went

The arrow Brahma's self had framed,

Alive with sparks that hissed and flamed,

Like Indra's flashing levin, true

To the false deer the missile flew

Cleaving his flesh that wonderous dart

Stood quivering in Márícha's heart.

Scarce from the ground one foot he sprang,

Then stricken fell with deadly pang.

Half lifeless, as he pressed the ground,

He gave a roar of awful sound

And ere the wounded giant died

He threw his borrowed form aside

Remembering still his lord's behest

He pondered in his heart how best

Sítá might send her guard away,

And Rávaṇ seize the helpless prey.

The monster knew the time was nigh,

And called aloud with eager cry,

“Ho, Sítá, Lakshmaṇ” and the tone

He borrowed was like Ráma's own.

So by that matchless arrow cleft,

The deer's bright form Márícha left,

Resumed his giant shape and size

And closed in death his languid eyes.

When Ráma saw his awful foe

Gasp, smeared with blood, in deadly throe,

His anxious thoughts to Sítá sped,

And the wise words that Lakshmaṇ said,

That this was false Márícha's art,

Returned again upon his heart.

He knew the foe he triumphed o'er

The name of great Márícha bore.

“The fiend,” he pondered, 'ere he died,

“Ho, Lakshmaṇ! ho, my Sítá!” cried

Ah, if that cry has reached her ear,

How dire must be my darling's fear!

And Lakshmaṇ of the mighty arm,

What thinks he in his wild alarm?

As thus he thought in sad surmise,

Each startled hair began to rise,

And when he saw the giant slain

And thought upon that cry again,

His spirit sank and terror pressed

Full sorely on the hero's breast.

Another deer he chased and struck,

He bore away the the fallen buck,

To Janasthán then turned his face

And hastened to his dwelling place.