by the twice-born ones. And there he beheld the
blind monarch of great wisdom seated on a cushion
of Kusa grass spread under Sala tree. And after
duly reverencing the royal sage, the king in an humble
speech introduced himself. Thereupon, offering
him the Arghya, a seat, and a cow, the monarch asked
his royal guest,—Wherefore is this visit?—Thus
addressed the king disclosed everything about his
intentions and purpose with reference to Satyavan.
And Aswapati said, ’O royal sage, this beautiful
girl is my daughter named Savitri. O thou versed
in morality, do thou, agreeably to the customs of
our order, take her from me as thy daughter-in-law!’
Hearing these words, Dyumatsena said, ’Deprived
of kingdom, and taking up our abode in the woods,
we are engaged in the practice of virtue as ascetics
with regulated lives. Unworthy of a forest life,
how will thy daughter, living in the sylvan asylum,
bear this hardship?’ Aswapati said, ’When
my daughter knoweth, as well as myself, that happiness
and misery come and go (without either being stationary),
such words as these are not fit to be used towards
one like me! O king, I have come hither, having
made up my mind! I have bowed to thee from friendship;
it behoveth thee not, therefore, to destroy my hope!
It behoveth thee not, also, to disregard me who, moved
by love, have come to thee! Thou art my equal
and fit for an alliance with me, as indeed, I am thy
equal and fit for alliance with thee! Do thou,
therefore, accept my daughter for thy daughter-in-law
and the wife of the good Satyavan!’ Hearing
these words Dyumatsena said, ’Formerly I had
desired an alliance with thee. But I hesitated,
being subsequently deprived of my kingdom. Let
this wish, therefore, that I had formerly entertained,
be accomplished this very day. Thou art, indeed,
a welcome guest to me!’
“Then summoning all the twice-born ones residing
in the hermitages of that forest, the two kings caused
the union to take place with due rites. And having
bestowed his daughter with suitable robes and ornaments,
Aswapati went back to his abode in great joy.
And Satyavan, having obtained a wife possessed of
every accomplishment, became highly glad, while she
also rejoiced exceedingly upon having gained the husband
after her own heart. And when her father had
departed, she put off all her ornaments, and clad
herself in barks and cloths dyed in red. And by
her services and virtues, her tenderness and self-denial,
and by her agreeable offices unto all, she pleased
everybody. And she gratified her mother-in-law
by attending to her person and by covering her with
robes and ornaments. And she gratified her father-in-law
by worshipping him as a god and controlling her speech.
And she pleased her husband by her honeyed speeches,
her skill in every kind of work, the evenness of her
temper, and by the indications of her love in private.
And thus, O Bharata, living in the asylum of those
pious dwellers of the forest, they continued for some
time to practise ascetic austerities. But the
words spoken by Narada were present night and day
in the mind of the sorrowful Savitri.’”