Page:Little Clay Cart (Ryder 1905).djvu/190

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154
ACT THE TENTH
[157.19 S.

The man, with meal and powder strewn,
Is now to beast of offering grown. 5

[He gazes intently before him.] Alas for human differences! [Mournfully.]

For when they see the fate that I must brave,
With tears for death's poor victim freely given,
The citizens cry "shame," yet cannot save,—
Can only pray that I attain to heaven. 6

Headsmen. Out of the way, gentlemen, out of the way! Why do you gaze upon him?

God Indra moving through the sky,[1]
The calving cow, the falling star,
The good man when he needs must die,
These four behold not from afar. 7

Goha. Look, Ahīnta! Look, man!

While he, of citizens the best,
Goes to his death at fate's behest
Does heaven thus weep that he must die?
Does lightning paint the cloudless sky? 8

Ahīnta. Goha, man,

The heaven weeps not that he must die,
Nor lightning paints the cloudless sky;
Yet streams are falling constantly
From many a woman's clouded eye. 9

And again:

While this poor victim to his death is led,
No man nor woman here but sorely weeps;
And so the dust, by countless tear-drops fed,
Thus peacefully upon the highway sleeps. 10

Chārudatta. [Gazes intently. Mournfully.]

These women, in their palaces who stay,

From half-shut windows peering, thus lament,
  1. That is, the lightning.