RamayanaHinduismAccepted by Some TraditionsSanskritShareRamayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 12Ralph T. H. Griffith 1870-1874 - EnglishMoreVersion - 1 availableRalph T. H. Griffith 1870-1874LanguageEnglishEspañol‹Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 1Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 2Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 3Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 4Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 5Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 6Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 7Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 8Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 9Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 10Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 11Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 12Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 13Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 14Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 15Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 16Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 17Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 18Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 19Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 20Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 21Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 22Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 23Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 24Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 25Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 26Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 27Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 28Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 29Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 30Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 31Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 32Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 33Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 34Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 35Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 36Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 39Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 40Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 41Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 42Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 43Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 44Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 45Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 46Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 47Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 48Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 49Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 50Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 51Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 52Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 53Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 54Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 55Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 56Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 57Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 58Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 59Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 60Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 61Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 62Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 63Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 64Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 65Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 66Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 67Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 68Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 69Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 70Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 71Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 72Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 73Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 74Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 75Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 76Ramayana Book 1: Bala Kanda 77Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 1Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 2Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 3Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 4Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 5Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 6Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 7Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 8Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 9Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 10Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 11Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 12Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 13Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 14Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 15Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 16Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 17Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 18Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 19Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 20Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 21Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 22Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 23Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 24Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 25Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 26Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 27Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 28Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 29Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 30Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 31Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 32Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 33Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 34Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 35Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 36Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 37Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 38Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 39Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 40Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 41Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 42Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 43Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 44Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 45Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 46Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 47Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 48Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 49Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 50Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 51Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 52Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 53Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 54Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 55Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 56Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 57Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 58Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 59Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 60Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 61Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 62Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 63Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 64Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 65Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 66Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 67Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 68Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 69Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 70Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 71Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 72Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 73Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 74Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 75Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 76Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 77Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 78Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 79Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 80Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 81Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 82Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 83Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 84Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 85Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 86Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 87Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 88Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 89Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 90Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 91Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 92Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 93Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 94Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 95Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 96Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 97Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 98Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 99Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 100Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 101Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 102Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 103Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 104Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 105Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 106Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 107Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 108Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 109Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 110Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 111Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 112Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 113Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 114Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 115Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 116Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 117Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 118Ramayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 119Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 1Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 2Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 3Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 4Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 5Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 6Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 7Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 8Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 9Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 10Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 11Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 12Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 13Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 14Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 15Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 16Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 17Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 18Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 19Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 20Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 21Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 22Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 23Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 24Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 25Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 26Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 27Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 28Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 29Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 30Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 31Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 32Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 33Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 34Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 35Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 36Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 37Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 38Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 39Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 40Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 41Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 42Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 43Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 44Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 45Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 46Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 47Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 48Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 49Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 50Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 51Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 52Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 53Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 54Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 55Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 56Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 57Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 58Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 59Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 60Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 61Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 62Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 63Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 64Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 65Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 66Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 67Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 68Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 69Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 70Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 71Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 72Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 73Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 74Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 75Ramayana Book 3: Aranya Kanda 76Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 1Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 2Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 3Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 4Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 5Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 6Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 7Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 8Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 9Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 10Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 11Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 12Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 13Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 14Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 15Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 16Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 17Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 18Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 19Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 20Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 21Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 22Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 23Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 24Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 25Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 26Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 27Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 28Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 29Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 30Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 31Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 32Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 33Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 34Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 35Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 36Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 37Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 38Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 39Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 40Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 41Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 42Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 43Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 44Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 45Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 46Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 47Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 48Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 49Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 50Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 51Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 52Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 53Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 54Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 55Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 56Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 57Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 58Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 59Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 60Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 61Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 62Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 63Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 64Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 65Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 66Ramayana Book 4: Kishkindha Kanda 67Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 1Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 2Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 3Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 4Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 6Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 7Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 8Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 9Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 10Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 11Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 12Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 13Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 14Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 15Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 16Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 17Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 18Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 19Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 20Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 21Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 22Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 23Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 24Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 25Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 26Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 27Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 30Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 31Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 32Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 33Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 34Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 35Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 36Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 37Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 38Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 41Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 42Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 43Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 44Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 45Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 46Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 47Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 48Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 49Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 50Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 51Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 52Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 53Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 54Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 55Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 56Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 57Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 58Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 65Ramayana Book 5: Sundara Kanda 66Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 1Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 2Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 3Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 4Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 5Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 6Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 7Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 8Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 9Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 10Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 11Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 12Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 13Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 14Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 15Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 16Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 17Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 18Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 19Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 20Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 21Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 22Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 23Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 24Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 25Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 26Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 27Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 28Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 29Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 30Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 31Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 32Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 33Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 34Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 35Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 36Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 37Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 38Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 39Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 40Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 41Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 42Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 43Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 44Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 45Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 46Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 47Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 48Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 49Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 50Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 51Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 52Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 53Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 54Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 59Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 60Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 61Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 62Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 63Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 64Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 65Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 66Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 67Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 68Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 69Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 70Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 71Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 72Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 73Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 74Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 75Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 93Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 96Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 100Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 101Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 102Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 103Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 106Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 108Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 109Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 110Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 111Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 112Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 113Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 114Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 115Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 116Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 117Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 118Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 119Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 120Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 121Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 122Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 123Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 124Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 125Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 126Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 127Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 128Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 129Ramayana Book 6: Yuddha Kanda 130›Book 2, Canto 12: Dasaratha’s LamentRamayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 12ListenPlay this chapter in spoken English.Save chapterListen to chapter1The monarch, as Kaikeyí pressed With cruel words her dire request, Stood for a time absorbed in thought While anguish in his bosom wrought. “Does some wild dream my heart assail? Or do my troubled senses fail? Does some dire portent scare my view? Or frenzy’s stroke my soul subdue?” 2Thus as he thought, his troubled mind In doubt and dread no rest could find, Distressed and trembling like a deer Who sees the dreaded tigress near. On the bare ground his limbs he threw, And many a long deep sigh he drew, Like a wild snake, with fury blind, By charms within a ring confined. 3Once as the monarch’s fury woke, “Shame on thee!” from his bosom broke, And then in sense-bewildering pain He fainted on the ground again. At length, when slowly strength returned, He answered as his eyeballs burned With the wild fury of his ire Consuming her, as ’twere, with fire: 4“Fell traitress, thou whose thoughts design The utter ruin of my line, What wrong have I or Ráma done? Speak murderess, speak thou wicked one, Seeks he not evermore to please Thee with all sonlike courtesies? By what persuasion art thou led To bring this ruin on his head? 5Ah me, that fondly unaware I brought thee home my life to share, Called daughter of a king, in truth A serpent with a venomed tooth! What fault can I pretend to find In Ráma praised by all mankind, That I my darling should forsake? No, take my life, my glory take: 6Let either queen be from me torn, But not my well-loved eldest-born. Him but to see is highest bliss, And death itself his face to miss. The world may sunless stand, the grain May thrive without the genial rain, But if my Ráma be not nigh My spirit from its frame will fly. 7Enough, thine impious plan forgo, O thou who plottest sin and woe. My head before thy feet, I kneel, And pray thee some compassion feel. O wicked dame, what can have led Thy heart to dare a plot so dread? Perchance thy purpose is to sound The grace thy son with me has found; 8Perchance the words that, all these days, Thou still hast said in Ráma’s praise, Were only feigned, designed to cheer With flatteries a father’s ear. Soon as thy grief, my Queen, I knew, My bosom felt the anguish too. In empty halls art thou possessed, And subject to anothers’ hest? 9Now on Ikshváku’s ancient race Falls foul disorder and disgrace, If thou, O Queen, whose heart so long Has loved the good should choose the wrong. Not once, O large-eyed dame, hast thou Been guilty of offence till now, Nor said a word to make me grieve, Now will I now thy sin believe. 10With thee my Ráma used to hold Like place with Bharat lofty-souled. As thou so often, when the pair Were children yet, wouldst fain declare. And can thy righteous soul endure That Ráma glorious, pious, pure, Should to the distant wilds be sent For fourteen years of banishment? 11Yea, Ráma Bharat’s self exceeds In love to thee and sonlike deeds, And, for deserving love of thee, As Bharat, even so is he. Who better than that chieftain may Obedience, love, and honour pay, Thy dignity with care protect, Thy slightest word and wish respect? 12Of all his countless followers none Can breathe a word against my son; Of many thousands not a dame Can hint reproach or whisper blame. All creatures feel the sweet control Of Ráma’s pure and gentle soul. The pride of Manu’s race he binds To him the people’s grateful minds. 13He wins the subjects with his truth, The poor with gifts and gentle ruth, His teachers with his docile will, The foemen with his archer skill. Truth, purity, religious zeal, The hand to give, the heart to feel, The love that ne’er betrays a friend, The rectitude that naught can bend, 14Knowledge, and meek obedience grace My Ráma pride of Raghu’s race. Canst thou thine impious plot design ’Gainst him in whom these virtues shine, Whose glory with the sages vies, Peer of the Gods who rule the skies! From him no harsh or bitter word To pain one creature have I heard, 15And how can I my son address, For thee, with words of bitterness? Have mercy, Queen: some pity show To see my tears of anguish flow, And listen to my mournful cry, A poor old man who soon must die. Whate’er this sea-girt land can boast Of rich and rare from coast to coast, 16To thee, my Queen, I give it all: But O, thy deadly words recall: O see, my suppliant hands entreat, Again my lips are on thy feet: Save Ráma, save my darling child, Nor kill me with this sin defiled.” He grovelled on the ground, and lay To burning grief a senseless prey, 17And ever and anon, assailed By floods of woe he wept and wailed, Striving with eager speed to gain The margent of his sea of pain. 18With fiercer words she fiercer yet The hapless father’s pleading met: “O Monarch, if thy soul repent The promise and thy free consent, How wilt thou in the world maintain Thy fame for truth unsmirched with stain? When gathered kings with thee converse, And bid thee all the tale rehearse, 19What wilt thou say, O truthful King, In answer to their questioning? “She to whose love my life I owe, Who saved me smitten by the foe, Kaikeyí, for her tender care, Was cheated of the oath I sware.” Thus wilt thou answer, and forsworn Wilt draw on thee the princes’ scorn. 20Learn from that tale, the Hawk and Dove, How strong for truth was Saivya’s love. Pledged by his word the monarch gave His flesh the suppliant bird to save. So King Alarka gave his eyes, And gained a mansion in the skies. The Sea himself his promise keeps, And ne’er beyond his limit sweeps. 21My deeds of old again recall, Nor let thy bond dishonoured fall. The rights of truth thou wouldst forget, Thy Ráma on the throne to set, And let thy days in pleasure glide, Fond King, Kauśalyá by thy side. Now call it by what name thou wilt, Justice, injustice, virtue, guilt, 22Thy word and oath remain the same, And thou must yield what thus I claim. If Ráma be anointed, I This very day will surely die, Before thy face will poison drink, And lifeless at thy feet will sink. Yea, better far to die than stay Alive to see one single day 23The crowds before Kauśalyá stand And hail her queen with reverent hand. Now by my son, myself, I swear, No gift, no promise whatsoe’er My steadfast soul shall now content, But only Ráma’s banishment.” 24So far she spake by rage impelled, And then the queen deep silence held. He heard her speech full fraught with ill, But spoke no word bewildered still, Gazed on his love once held so dear Who spoke unlovely rede to hear; Then as he slowly pondered o’er The queen’s resolve and oath she swore. 25Once sighing forth, Ah Ráma! he Fell prone as falls a smitten tree. His senses lost like one insane, Faint as a sick man weak with pain, Or like a wounded snake dismayed, So lay the king whom earth obeyed. Long burning sighs he slowly heaved, As, conquered by his woe, he grieved, 26And thus with tears and sobs between His sad faint words addressed the queen: 27“By whom, Kaikeyí, wast thou taught This flattering hope with ruin fraught? Have goblins seized thy soul, O dame, Who thus canst speak and feel no shame? Thy mind with sin is sicklied o’er, From thy first youth ne’er seen before. A good and loving wife wast thou, But all, alas! is altered now. 28What terror can have seized thy breast To make thee frame this dire request, That Bharat o’er the land may reign, And Ráma in the woods remain? Turn from thine evil ways, O turn, And thy perfidious counsel spurn, If thou would fain a favour do To people, lord, and Bharat too. 29O wicked traitress, fierce and vile, Who lovest deeds of sin and guile, What crime or grievance dost thou see, What fault in Ráma or in me? Thy son will ne’er the throne accept If Ráma from his rights be kept, For Bharat’s heart more firmly yet Than Ráma’s is on justice set. 30How shall I say, Go forth, and brook Upon my Ráma’s face to look, See his pale cheek and ashy lips Dimmed like the moon in sad eclipse? How see the plan so well prepared When prudent friends my counsels shared, All ruined, like a host laid low Beneath some foeman’s murderous blow. 31What will these gathered princes say, From regions near and far away? “O’erlong endures the monarch’s reign, or now he is a child again.” When many a good and holy sage In Scripture versed, revered for age, Shall ask for Ráma, what shall I Unhappy, what shall I reply? 32“By Queen Kaikeyí long distressed I drove him forth and dispossessed.” Although herein the truth I speak, They all will hold me false and weak. What will Kauśalyá say when she Demands her son exiled by me? Alas! what answer shall I frame, Or how console the injured dame? 33She like a slave on me attends, And with a sister’s care she blends A mother’s love, a wife’s, a friend’s. In spite of all her tender care, Her noble son, her face most fair, Another queen I could prefer And for thy sake neglected her, But now, O Queen, my heart is grieved 34For love and care by thee received, E’en as the sickening wretch repents His dainty meal and condiments. And how will Queen Sumitrá trust The husband whom she finds unjust, Seeing my Ráma driven hence Dishonoured, and for no offence? Ah! the Videhan bride will hear 35A double woe, a double fear, Two whelming sorrows at one breath, Her lord’s disgrace, his father’s death. Mine aged bosom she will wring And kill me with her sorrowing, Sad as a fair nymph left to weep Deserted on Himálaya’s steep. For short will be my days, I ween, 36When I with mournful eyes have seen My Ráma wandering forth alone And heard dear Sítá sob and moan. Ah me! my fond belief I rue. Vile traitress, loved as good and true, As one who in his thirst has quaffed, Deceived by looks, a deadly draught. Ah! thou hast slain me, murderess, while 37Soothing my soul with words of guile, As the wild hunter kills the deer Lured from the brake his song to hear. Soon every honest tongue will fling Reproach on the dishonest king; The people’s scorn in every street The seller of his child will meet, And such dishonour will be mine 38As whelms a Bráhman drunk with wine. Ah me, for my unhappy fate, Compelled thy words to tolerate! Such woe is sent to scourge a crime Committed in some distant time. For many a day with sinful care I cherished thee, thou sin and snare, Kept thee, unwitting, like a cord 39Destined to bind its hapless lord. Mine hours of ease I spent with thee, Nor deemed my love my death would be, While like a heedless child I played, On a black snake my hand I laid. A cry from every mouth will burst And all the world will hold me curst, Because I saw my high-souled son 40Unkinged, unfathered, and undone; “The king by power of love beguiled Is weaker than a foolish child, His own beloved son to make An exile for a woman’s sake. By chaste and holy vows restrained, By reverend teachers duly trained. When he his virtue’s fruit should taste 41He falls by sin and woe disgraced.” Two words will all his answer be When I pronounce the stern decree, “Hence, Ráma, to the woods away,” All he will say is, I obey. O, if he would my will withstand When banished from his home and land, This were a comfort in my woe; 42But he will ne’er do this, I know. My Ráma to the forest fled, And curses thick upon my head, Grim Death will bear me hence away, His world-abominated prey. When I am gone and Ráma too. How wilt thou those I love pursue? What vengeful sin will be designed 43Against the queens I leave behind? When thou hast slain her son and me Kauśalyá soon will follow: she Will sink beneath her sorrows’ weight, And die like me disconsolate. Exist, Kaikeyí, in thy pride, And let thy heart be gratified, When thou my queens and me hast hurled, 44And children, to the under world. Soon wilt thou rule as empress o’er My noble house unvext before. But then to wild confusion left, Of Ráma and of me bereft. If Bharat to thy plan consent And long for Ráma’s banishment, Ne’er let his hands presume to pay 45The funeral honours to my clay. Vile foe, thou cause of all mine ill, Obtain at last thy cursed will. A widow soon shalt thou enjoy The sweets of empire with thy boy. O Princess, sure some evil fate First brought thee here to devastate, In whom the night of ruin lies 46Veiled in a consort’s fair disguise. The scorn of all and deepest shame Will long pursue my hated name, And dire disgrace on me will press, Misled by thee to wickedness. How shall my Ráma, whom, before, His elephant or chariot bore, Now with his feet, a wanderer, tread 47The forest wilds around him spread? How shall my son, to please whose taste, The deftest cooks, with earrings graced, With rivalry and jealous care The dainty meal and cates prepare— How shall he now his life sustain With acid fruit and woodland grain? He spends his time unvext by cares, 48And robes of precious texture wears: How shall he, with one garment round His limbs recline upon the ground? Whose was this plan, this cruel thought Unheard till now, with ruin fraught, To make thy son Ayodhyá’s king, And send my Ráma wandering? Shame, shame on women! Vile, untrue, 49Their selfish ends they still pursue. Not all of womankind I mean. But more than all this wicked queen. O worthless, cruel, selfish dame, I brought thee home, my plague and woe. What fault in me hast thou to blame, Or in my son who loves thee so? Fond wives may from their husbands flee, 50And fathers may their sons desert, But all the world would rave to see My Ráma touched with deadly hurt. I joy his very step to hear, As though his godlike form I viewed; And when I see my Ráma near I feel my youth again renewed. There might be life without the sun, 51Yea, e’en if Indra sent no rain, But, were my Ráma banished, none Would, so I think, alive remain. A foe that longs my life to take, I brought thee here my death to be, Caressed thee long, a venomed snake, And through my folly die. Ah me! Ráma and me and Lakshmaṇ slay, 52And then with Bharat rule the state; So bring the kingdom to decay, And fawn on those thy lord who hate, Plotter of woe, for evil bred, For such a speech why do not all Thy teeth from out thy wicked head Split in a thousand pieces fall? My Ráma’s words are ever kind, 53He knows not how to speak in ire: Then how canst thou presume to find A fault in him whom all admire? Yield to despair, go mad, or die, Or sink within the rifted earth; Thy fell request will I deny, Thou shamer of thy royal birth. Thy longer life I scarce can bear, 54Thou ruin of my home and race, Who wouldst my heart and heartstrings tear, Keen as a razor, false and base. My life is gone, why speak of joy? For what, without my son, were sweet? Spare, lady, him thou canst destroy; I pray thee as I touch thy feet.” He fell and wept with wild complaint, 55Heart-struck by her presumptuous speech, But could not touch, so weak and faint, The cruel feet he strove to reach. ‹Previous chapterRamayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 11Next chapterRamayana Book 2: Ayodhya Kanda 13›Similar passagesBy tradition and source labelFind similarCompare selectedCompare with similarAsk Deep ThoughtSelect passages to search for parallels.Tap any verse to select it, then compare selected passages or ask Deep Thought. Public domain in the United States via Project Gutenberg