wealth, or life?
Or shall I give thee wife, or child, or 
land?
Or my prosperity itself?" "O king!"
The sage replied, "thy 
present I accept;
But let thine alms, I pray, be granted first,--
The 
offering for the kingly sacrifice."
"O Brâhman!" said the king, "the 
alms are thine;
Further than this, whatever be the gift
Thou mayest 
desire, freely I give it thee.
Ask what thou wilt." Then Višvâmitra 
spake:
"Give me the earth, its mountains, seas, and towns,
With all 
its kingdoms, chariots, horses, men;
Its elephants, its treasure-houses 
too;
Its treasures vast, and all whate'er beside
Is recognized as thine: 
oh! give me all,
I pray, except thyself, thy wife, thy son,
And this 
thy righteousness, that follows close
Beside thee. Sinless one! oh 
thou who art
Perfect in righteousness! oh give me all--
All beside 
these. What need of further words." 
The king, with heart rejoicing, and unchanged
In countenance, 
hearing the sage's words,
Said, humbly bowing down before the saint,
"So be thy wish fulfilled." "O saintly king,"
Said Višvâmitra, "if 
the world is mine,
And power, and wealth, I pray you who shall reign,
Since in this kingdom as a devotee
I dwell?" Then Harišchandra 
said: "'Ere this,
Before the world was thine by my free gift,
Thou
wast the lord of all; how much more now?
Thy right is doubly sure." 
Then said the sage:
"If this indeed be so,--if the whole world
Be 
truly mine, and all its sovereignty,
Then should'st thou not remain, 
nor leave thyself
Aught of that kingdom which thou hast renounced,
But, casting off thy royal ornaments,
Thou should'st depart, clothed 
in a dress of bark."
The king, obedient to the sage's word,
Stripped 
off his royal dress, and, with his wife
And son, made haste to go. 
Then said the saint:
"Stop, Harišchandra! Hast thou then forgot
The 
offering for the kingly sacrifice
That thou hast promised us?" Replied 
the king:
"O mighty saint! the kingdom now is _thine_;
All have I 
given to _thee_: and as for me,
What have I left?--nought! save 
myself,
My wife, my son!" "Thou sayest the truth, indeed,"
Answered the sage; "but yet there still remains
The offering for the 
kingly sacrifice.
And this know well: A vow to Brâhmans made,
If 
unfulfilled, works special woe to him
Who made the vow. For in this 
sacrifice
Must offerings of worth be freely made
To 
Brâhmans;--offerings until they cry
Hold! that suffices for us! 
Therefore pay
Thy promised vow, nor longer hesitate.
'Alms are for 
Brâhmans,' thou thyself hast said,
'Those who are weak must be 
protected: foes
In battle must be met and overcome.'"
"O saintly 
priest!" answered the king, "my wealth
Is all departed: nothing now 
remains
For me to give: yet grant me time I pray,
And I will pay the 
offering!" "Noble king,"
Said Višvâmitra, "speak I pray thee! Say
What time dost thou appoint that I should wait?
Speak! no delay! or 
else my curse of fire
Shall burn thee up." Then Harišchandra said:
"Most holy Brâhman! when a month has past
The money for the 
offering shall be thine.
Now I have nothing. Oh! be pleased to grant
Remission for the present." Said the sage,
"Go! go! most noble 
prince! maintain thy faith!
And may'st thou prosper! may no enemies
Harass thy road." Commanded thus, the king
Departed as an 
outcast;--he, the king
Of all the earth, an exile with his wife
Unused 
to go afoot, and with his son
Went forth: while cries and lamentations 
rose
On every side: "Our hearts are filled with pain,
Why dost thou
leave us thus? O virtuous king!
Show mercy to thy subjects. 
Righteousness
Indeed shines forth in thee; if thou art full
Of mercy, 
may it overflow on us.
Stay! Mighty Prince! one moment, while we 
gaze
With lover's eyes upon thy beauteous form.
Alas! our Prince! 
Shall we ne'er see thee more?
How changed thy princely state! Thou, 
who did'st once
Go forth, surrounded by attendant kings,
Who 
marched on foot; while stately elephants
Bore e'en thy ministers. 
Now, Lord of Kings!
Thyself art driven forth on foot. Yet, stay!
Think, Harišchandra! how wilt thou endure
The dust, the heat, the toil? 
Stay, mighty prince,
Nor cast thy duty off. Oh, show to us
Some 
mercy, for herein thy duty lies.
Behold, we cast off all for thee! Our 
wives,
Our wealth, our children, our possessions, all
Have we 
relinquished; like thy shadow,
We would follow thee. Oh leave us not!
For wheresoe'er thou art is happiness,
And heaven itself would be 
no heaven to us
Without our prince." Then, overwhelmed with grief
At these laments, the king stayed on his course,
In pity for his 
loving citizens.
Then Višvâmitra, filled with rage, his eyes
Rolling 
with wrath, exclaimed: "Shame on thee! shame!
O full of falsehood, 
and of wickedness.
How! would'st thou, then, speaker of lies!
Resume the gifts that thou hast freely made,
And reinstate thee in thy 
kingdom?" "Sir!
I go!" replied the king to these rude words,
And 
trembling crept away in haste, his wife
Holding him by the hand. And, 
as she went,
Her fragile form o'ercome with weariness,
The 
Brâhman smote her fiercely with his stick.
Then Harišchandra, pained 
with inmost grief,
Seeing the stroke, said meekly, "Sir! I go!"
Nor 
further spoke. Filled with compassion then,
The Višvadevas said: 
"What sin is this?
What torments shall indeed suffice for him
By 
whom this pious king--the offerer
Of prayer, and sacrifice, has    
    
		
	
	
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