Hindu literature : Comprising The Book of good counsels, Nala and Damayanti, The Ramayana, and Sakoontala by Kalidasa;Anonymous;Toru Dutt;Valmiki
page 16 of 623 (02%)
page 16 of 623 (02%)
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'Ho! ho!' says the Tiger, 'art thou stuck in a slough? stay, I will fetch thee out!' So saying he approached the wretched man and seized him--who meanwhile bitterly reflected-- 'Be his Scripture-learning wondrous, yet the cheat will be a cheat; Be her pasture ne'er so bitter, yet the cow's milk will be sweet.' And on that verse, too-- 'Trust not water, trust not weapons; trust not clawed nor horned things; Neither give thy soul to women, nor thy life to Sons of Kings.' And those others-- 'Look! the Moon, the silver roamer, from whose splendor darkness flies With his starry cohorts marching, like a crowned king through the skies. All the grandeur, all the glory, vanish in the Dragon's jaw; What is written on the forehead, that will be, and nothing more,' Here his meditations were cut short by the Tiger devouring him. "And that," said Speckle-neck, "is why we counselled caution." "Why, yes!" said a certain pigeon, with some presumption, "but you've read the verse-- |
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