The King who won a Fairy as his Wife.Why did his counsellor's heart break?
Then the king went as before to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started back.And the goblin said once more: "O King, I like you wonderfully well because you are not discouraged.So I will tell you a delightful little story to relieve your weariness.Listen."In the Anga country was a young king named Glory- banner, so beautiful that he seemed an incarnation of the god of love.He had conquered all his enemies by his strength of arm, and he had a counsellor named Farsight.
At last the king, proud of his youth and beauty, entrusted all the power in his quiet kingdom to his counsellor, and gradually devoted himself entirely to pleasure.He spent all his time with the ladies of the court, and listened more attentively to their love-songs than to the advice of statesmen.He took greater pleasure in peeping into their windows than into the holes in his administration.But Farsight bore the whole burden of public business, and never wearied day or night.
Then the people began to murmur: "The counsellor Farsight has seduced the king, and now he alone has all the kingly glory." And the counsellor said to his wife, whose name was Prudence: "My dear, the king is devoted to his pleasures, and great infamy is heaped upon me by the people.They say I have devoured the kingdom, though in fact I support the burden of it.Now popular gossip damages the greatest man.Was not Rama forced to abandon his good wife by popular clamour? So what shall I do now?"Then his clever wife Prudence showed that she deserved her name.She said: "My dear, leave the king and go on a pilgrimage.Tell him that you are an old man now, and should be permitted to travel in foreign countries for a time.Then the gossip will cease, when they see that you are unselfish.And when you are gone, the king will bear his own burdens.And thus his levity will gradually disappear.And when you come back, you can assume your office without reproach."To this advice the counsellor assented, and said to the king in the course of conversation: "Your Majesty, permit me to go on a pilgrimage for a few days.Virtue seems of supreme importance to me."But the king said: "No, no, counsellor.Is there no other kind of virtue except in pilgrimages? How about generosity and that kind of thing? Isn't it possible to prepare for heaven in your own house?"Then the counsellor said: "Your Majesty, one gets worldly prosperity from generosity and that kind of thing.But a pilgrimage gives eternal life.A prudent man should attend to it while he has strength.The chance may be lost, for no one can be sure of his health."But the king was still arguing against it when the doorkeeper came in and said: "Your Majesty, the glorious sun is diving beneath the pool of heaven.Arise.The hour for your bath is slipping away." And the king went immediately to bathe.
The counsellor went home, still determined on his pilgrimage.He would not let his wife go with him, but started secretly.Not even his servants knew.
He wandered alone through many countries to many holy places, and finally came to the Odra country.There he saw a city near the ocean, where he entered a temple to Shiva and sat down in the court.There he sat, hot and dusty from long travel, when he was seen by a merchant named Treasure who had come to worship the god.The merchant gathered from his dress and appearance that he was a high-born Brahman, and invited him home, and entertained him with food, bathing, and the like.
When the counsellor was rested, the merchant asked him: "Who are you? Whence do you come? And where are you going?" And the other replied: "I am a Brahman named Farsight.I came here on a pilgrimage from the Anga country."Then the merchant Treasure said to him: "I am preparing for a trading voyage to Golden Island.Do you stay in my house.And when I come back, and you are wearied from your pilgrimage, rest here for a time before going home." But Farsight said: "I do not want to stay here.I would rather go with you." And the good merchant agreed.And the counsellor slept in the first bed he had lain in for many nights.
The next day he went to the seashore with the merchant, and entered the ship loaded with the merchant's goods.He sailed along, admiring the wonders and terrors of the sea, till at last he reached Golden Island.There he stayed for a time until the merchant had finished his buying and selling.Now on the way back, he saw a magic tree suddenly rising from the ocean.It had beautiful branches, boughs of gold, fruits of jewels, and splendid blossoms.And sitting on a jewelled couch in the branches was a lovely maiden of heavenly beauty.And while the counsellor wondered what it all meant, the maiden took her lute in her hand, and began to sing:
Whateverseedoffateissown,Thefruitappears--'tis strange!Whatever deed a man has done,Not God himself can change.
And when she had made her meaning clear, the heavenly maiden straightway sank with the magic tree and the couch.And Farsight thought: "What a wonderful thing I have seen to-day! What a strange place the ocean is for the appearance of a tree with a fairy in it! And if this is a usual occurrence at sea, why do not other goddesses arise?"The pilot and other sailors saw that he was astonished, and they said: "Sir, this wonderful maiden appears here regularly, and sinks a moment after, but the sight is new to you." Then the counsellor, filled with amazement, came to the shore with Treasure, and disembarked.And when the merchant had unloaded his goods and caused his servants to rejoice, the counsellor went home with him and spent many happy days there.