The
death of the woman he loved as intimately as his own breath caused desperate
grief to the ruler; his lamentation shook the forest from end to end. The earth
quaked in sympathy; the trees stood still, rooted in wonder at the sorrow that
filled the royal heart and overflowed it.
Narada
heard the wail of the king - his sobs and groans - as he wept over the corpse
of his beloved. He came down to console his agony. "Raja!", he said,
"sorrow is of no avail when death strikes; the body is prone to birth and
death; what brings about birth brings about death too; to seek to know why they
happen is an exercise in insanity.
The acts of God are beyond the cause-and-effect chain. Ordinary intellects cannot unravel them; they can at best guess the reason, as far as their faculties can reach. How can the intellect grasp something out of its domain?
"Death
is inevitable for each embodied being. However, since the death of Indumathi is
resonant with strangeness, I have to tell you its reason", Narada said. He
drew Aja near and said, "Listen! In former days, the sage Thrnabindu was
engaged in extreme asceticism, and Indra resolved to test his attainments and
the depth of his equanimity.
Be born as a human being, fallen from heaven; learn what it is to be a mortal human. Cursing her thus, the sage closed his eyes and plunged into meditation again.
Harini
shook with fear and shed profuse tears of repentance; she prayed for pardon and
for cancellation of her exile from heaven, she pleaded pathetically for the
removal of the curse.
Continued...
Love.
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