Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

The murderer was told to wait in this temple, and when the young king was absorbed in prayer, to fall suddenly upon him and kill him.  Then, when Putraka was dead, he was to take his body and bury it far away in the depths of the forest where it could never be found.  At first it seemed likely that this cruel plot would succeed.  To make quite sure, the murderer got two other men as wicked as himself to come and help him, promising to give them a share in the reward.  But the god who had taken care of Putraka ever since he was born, did not forget him now.  As the young king prayed, forgetting everything in his earnest pleading for those he loved, he did not see or hear the evil men drawing stealthily close to him.  Their arms were uplifted to slay him, and the gleam of the weapons in the light that was always kept burning flashed upon him, when suddenly the heavenly guardian of the temple, who never left it day or night, but was generally invisible, appeared and cast a spell upon the wicked men, whose hands were arrested in the very act to strike.

What a wonderful sight that must have been, when Putraka, disturbed in his prayers, looked round and saw the men who had come to kill him, with the shadowy form of the guardian threatening them!  He knew at once that he had been saved from a dreadful death by a messenger from the god he had been worshipping.  As he gazed at the men, the guardian faded away and he was left alone with them.  Slowly the spell cast on them was broken, and they dropped their weapons, prostrated themselves, and clasped their hands in an appeal for mercy to the man they had meant to destroy.  Putraka looked at them quietly and sadly.  He felt no anger against them, only a great thankfulness for his escape.  He spoke to the men very sternly, asking them why they wished to harm him; and the chief murderer told him who had sent them.

The knowledge that his father wished to kill him shocked and grieved the young long terribly, but he controlled himself even when he learnt the sad truth.  He told the men that he forgave them, for they were not the most to blame; and he made them promise never to betray who had bribed them to kill him.  He then gave them some money and told them to leave him.

13.  What do you think the most beautiful incident in this account of the scene in the temple?

14.  What do you suppose were the thoughts of the murderers when they left the temple after Putraka forgave them?

CHAPTER VIII

When Putraka was alone, he threw himself upon the ground and wept very bitterly.  He felt that he could never be happy again, never trust anyone again.  He had so loved his father and uncles.  It had been such a joy to him to give them pleasure, and yet they hated him and wished to kill him.  He wondered whether he was himself to blame for what had happened, and began to think he was not worthy to be king, if he could make such a mistake as he

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Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.