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6
 
he heard the following conversation from behind a bush
and recognised that it was Sumati and his other ministers
that were talking. Sir, we are here," said one of them,
"under the orders of the king to guard the pregnant queen.
She gave birth to a child with all auspicious marks on the
body. Today is the eleventh day and religious rites were
performed for the welfare of the child. But, what a bad
omen! I dreamt a dream that the child was carried away
by a bird." Soon after, the women cried, "Ah, a man in
the shape of a swan is taking away the child and flying up
the sky." The queen sank in sorrow and the ministers got
alarmed at the sudden disappearance of the child. Then
she addressed the ministers as follows:-"Sirs, by the
command of the king I have been taken here to worship
the goddess Vindhyaväsinī¹ till I give birth to a child. But
unfortunately, my child is lost. Grief is consuming my body.
I shall burn it completely in a forest conflagration. Please
convey my last respects to my Lord."
 
(Av. Sāra II. 86-98; Av. pp. 114-22)
 
AVANTISUNDARIĪ KATHAĀ SAĀRA
 

 
he heard the following conversation from behind a bush
and recognised that it was Sumati and his other ministers
that were talking. "Sir, we are here," said one of them,
"under the orders of the king to guard the pregnant queen.
She gave birth to a child with all auspicious marks on the
body. Today is the eleventh day and religious rites were
performed for the welfare of the child. But, what a bad
omen! I dreamt a dream that the child was carried away
by a bird." Soon after, the women cried, "Ah, a man in
the shape of a swan is taking away the child and flying up
the sky." The queen sank in sorrow and the ministers got
alarmed at the sudden disappearance of the child. Then
she addressed the ministers as follows:-"Sirs, by the
command of the king I have been taken here to worship
the goddess Vindhyavāsinī [^¹] till I give birth to a child. But
unfortunately, my child is lost. Grief is consuming my body.
I shall burn it completely in a forest conflagration. Please
convey my last respects to my Lord."
(Av. Sāra II. 8
66
 
-98; Av. pp. 114-22)
The ministers dissuaded the queen from her rash attempt

and said: "Your child has all the prosperous signs of an

emperor. He is superhuman. He will not be lost, but may

be hiding somewhere." But she was firm in her resolve. At

dead of night, she quietly stole away from the camp, went near

the thicket, where the king happend to lie prostrate, and decid-

ing to hang herself by a noose, uttered the words: "Oh, my

Lord, I am dying." The king recognised her from her voice

and asked her in faint words not to be rash. She was taken

aback when she heard the words of her lord in that

lonely place; she cried for a lamp and a light was brought.

She beheld her lord bleeding all over his body and lying flat

on the ground as if dead, at which she fell down and fainted.

[Recovering consciousness, she saw him in an unconscious

state and decided to follow him in death by falling into fire].

At this moment, the king opened his bright eyes and raised
his hands and the upper part of his body as if he was free
 

his hands and the upper part of his body as if he was free
 
[^
1]. The deity of the celebrated temple Vindubāsinī situated

on a part of the hills near Mirzapur. The goddess Vindubāsini
ī
was widely worshipped in the seventh century and her shrine was

considered as one of the most sacred places of prilgrimage. Cf.

also Kathasaritsaāsaritsāgara, chs, 52, 54,
 
.