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SUMMARY OF CONTENTS
 
39
 

 
beloved in my former life, and lived long happily with her in

her father's house. Then desirous of seeing my relations in

my native land, I boarded a ship with my pregnant wife but

the ship was caught in a tempest and was wrecked. Struggling

in the waters, I saw my wife and her nurse catching hold of a

floating plank and drifting out of sight. I got upon the back

of a fish and reached an island and lived alone. From there a

boatman took me to the Bāli island. I roamed about all over

the land for sixteen years searching for my wife in towns,

villages and forests but in vain. In despair I threw myself

from the precipice and you have saved my life. Here is

my wife and I am anxious to know what became of the baby
she bore

she bore in
her womb?'
 

 
(Av. Sāra VI. 21-32)
 

 
'
Then the old woman who heard the story began her

own. 'Dear child, here is my daughter who was about to kill

herself because of her sorrow at separation from you.

We reached the shore with difficulty and she gave birth to a

child in a jungle. For fear of wild animals I took the child

in my arms and searched for fire. A wild buffalo knocked

me down and I fell unconscious. When I regained conscious-

ness I saw a Brahman by my side, but not the child. Seeing

me in distress he took me to the spot where this daughter

was laid up in confinement. Seeing me returning

without her child, she could not control her sorrow.

We were both about to take our lives. The Brahman

prevented us from the rash act, soothed her grief with words

wisdom, healed my wounds and went his way in quest of

learning, I reminded her of the curse you had told me of

that you would suffer separation for sixteen years and that

your son would become the friend of an emperor. The

sixteen years have passed and having lost hope of meeting

you, she attempted suicide.'
 

 
(Av. Sāra VI. 326b-40)
 

 
'
Then I began the story of their child: 'An elephant

killed the buffalo and carried away the child. The animal

flung the child in air, when a lion was about to leap on

its back. A monkey seated on the branch of a tree caught

hold of the child; and from monkey's hands, it fell into the

flower basket of a sage, which incident gave it the name of

Puşpodbhava. The sage took the child to the nurse but