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MADHURAVIJAYAM
 
52. The city was full of virtuous Brāhmans, and

armies of musicians ever strode its expansive grounds.

Thus, like the full-moon night, or the world of celestial

bards, serenity and music reigned unceasingly all round.
 
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53. Bhujangas, or youths of fashion, made that

city their favourite haunt, even as bhujangas, or

serpents, make the crown of Śiva their chosen abode.
Good-hearted people in large numbers loved to wander
its precincts like gods in the regions of the
Siva their chosen abode.
Good-hearted people in large numbers loved to wander
its precincts like gods in the regions of the S
umēru.
 

 
54. The city was the play-ground of all good

fortune. Prosperity in all its aspects delighted to live

in its saloons. The city looked like a garland of precious

stones on the shores of the sea of virtue.
 

 
55 The disc of the sun caught in the heights of

the city's palaces produced on the on-lookers the illu-

sion of a golden jar.
 

 
56. The damsels playing on the grounds of the top

floor of the city's mansions often laid their hands on

the rounded body of the moon, mistaking it for their

play-ball of pearls.
 

 
57. Hearing the sound of the drum accompanying

the music played in the city's palaces, the peacock began

to dance even in the absence of any appropriate occa-

sion (viz., the appearance of a thunder-cloud).
 

 
58. The clouds that hung about the sides of the

city's palaces with the colour of padmarāga gems reflect-

ed in them, always looked brown like evening clouds.
 

 
59. The clouds of smoke that rushed through the

crevices in the buildings of the city at the evening-time