Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.
not come to her when any one else was near.  She told the lady to go away, and she pretended to do so; but she only kept a little further off.  And though the queen could no longer see her, she knew she was there, and so did the birds and the deer.  This went on for a little time; and then Kadali-Garbha asked her husband to tell every one that she was not to be disturbed when she went to see her friends in the forest.

“I am afraid,” said the king, “that some harm will come to you.  There are wild beasts in the depths of the wood who might hurt you.  And what should I do if any harm came to my dear one?”

Kadali-Garbha was grieved when Dridha-Varman said this, for she knew it was not true; and she looked at him so sadly that he felt ashamed of having doubted her.  All would perhaps have been well even now, if he had told her of the story he had heard about her, because then she could have proved that it was not true.  But he did not do that; he only said, “I cannot let you be alone so far from home.  Why not be content with the lovely gardens all round the palace?  If you still wish to go to the woods, I will send one of the game-keepers with you instead of the lady who has been watching you.  Then he can protect you if any harmful creature should approach.”

“If my lord does not wish me to be alone in the forest,” answered the queen, “I will be content with the gardens.  For no birds or animals would come near me if one of their enemies were with me.  But,” she added, as her eyes filled with tears, “will not my lord tell me why he no longer trusts his wife, who loves him with all her heart?”

The king was very much touched by what Kadali-Garbha said, but still could not make up his mind to tell her the truth.  So he only embraced her fondly, and said she was a good little wife to be so ready to obey him.  The queen went away very sadly, wondering to herself what she could do to prove to her dear lord that she loved him as much as ever.  She took care never to go outside the palace gardens, but she longed very much for her old freedom, and began to grow pale and thin.

The wicked woman who had tried to do her harm was very much disappointed that she had only succeeded in making her unhappy; so she went again to Asoka-Mala, and promised her more money if only she would think of some plan to get the king to send his wife away.  The wise woman considered a long time, and then she said:  “You must use the barber again.  He goes from house to house, and he must tell the king that the beautiful woman, who used to roam about in the forest collecting herbs, has been seen there again in the dead of the night, when she could be sure no one would find out what she was doing.”

Now it so happened that Kadali-Garbha was often unable to sleep because of her grief that the king did not love her so much as he used to do.  One night she got so tired of lying awake that she got up very quietly, so as not to disturb her husband, and putting on her sari, she went out into the gardens, hoping that the fresh air might help her to sleep.  Presently the king too woke up, and finding that his wife was no longer beside him, he became very uneasy, and was about to go and seek her, when she came back.  He asked her where she had been; and she told him exactly what had happened, but she did not explain why she could not sleep.

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Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.