Skip to content
Linespedia

Jogadhya Uma.

Topics: classic

"Shell-bracelets ho! Shell-bracelets ho!     Fair maids and matrons come and buy!"     Along the road, in morning's glow,     The pedlar raised his wonted cry.     The road ran straight, a red, red line,     To Khirogram, for cream renowned,     Through pasture-meadows where the kine,     In knee-deep grass, stood magic bound     And half awake, involved in mist,     That floated in dun coils profound,     Till by the sudden sunbeams kist     Rich rainbow hues broke all around.     "Shell-bracelets ho! Shell-bracelets ho!"     The roadside trees still dripped with dew,     And hung their blossoms like a show.     Who heard the cry? 'Twas but a few,     A ragged herd-boy, here and there,     With his long stick and naked feet;     A ploughman wending to his care,     The field from which he hopes the wheat;     An early traveller, hurrying fast     To the next town; an urchin slow     Bound for the school; these heard and past,     Unheeding all,--"Shell-bracelets ho!"     Pellucid spread a lake-like tank     Beside the road now lonelier still,     High on three sides arose the bank     Which fruit-trees shadowed at their will;     Upon the fourth side was the Ghat,     With its broad stairs of marble white,     And at the entrance-arch there sat,     Full face against the morning light,     A fair young woman with large eyes,     And dark hair falling to her zone,     She heard the pedlar's cry arise,     And eager seemed his ware to own.     "Shell-bracelets ho! See, maiden see!     The rich enamel sunbeam-kist!     Happy, oh happy, shalt thou be,     Let them but clasp that slender wrist;     These bracelets are a mighty charm,     They keep a lover ever true,     And widowhood avert, and harm,     Buy them, and thou shalt never rue.     Just try them on!"--She stretched her hand,     "Oh what a nice and lovely fit!     No fairer hand, in all the land,     And lo! the bracelet matches it."     Dazzled the pedlar on her gazed     Till came the shadow of a fear,     While she the bracelet arm upraised     Against the sun to view more clear.     Oh she was lovely, but her look     Had something of a high command     That filled with awe. Aside she shook     Intruding curls by breezes fanned     And blown across her brows and face,     And asked the price, which when she heard     She nodded, and with quiet grace     For payment to her home referred.     "And where, O maiden, is thy house?     But no, that wrist-ring has a tongue,     No maiden art thou, but a spouse,     Happy, and rich, and fair, and young."     "Far otherwise, my lord is poor,     And him at home thou shalt not find;     Ask for my father; at the door     Knock loudly; he is deaf, but kind.     Seest thou that lofty gilded spire     Above these tufts of foliage green?     That is our place; its point of fire     Will guide thee o'er the tract between."     "That is the temple spire."--"Yes, there     We live; my father is the priest,     The manse is near, a building fair     But lowly, to the temple's east.     When thou hast knocked, and seen him, say,     His daughter, at Dhamaser Ghat,     Shell-bracelets bought from thee to-day,     And he must pay so much for that.     Be sure, he will not let thee pass     Without the value, and a meal,     If he demur, or cry alas!     No money hath he,--then reveal,     "Within the small box, marked with streaks     Of bright vermilion, by the shrine,     The key whereof has lain for weeks     Untouched, he'll find some coin,--'tis mine.     That will enable him to pay     The bracelet's price, now fare thee well!"     She spoke, the pedlar went away,     Charmed with her voice, as by some spell;     While she left lonely there, prepared     To plunge into the water pure,     And like a rose her beauty bared,     From all observance quite secure.     Not weak she seemed, nor delicate,     Strong was each limb of flexile grace,     And full the bust; the mien elate,     Like hers, the goddess of the chase     On Latmos hill,--and oh, the face     Framed in its cloud of floating hair,     No painter's hand might hope to trace     The beauty and the glory there!     Well might the pedlar look with awe,     For though her eyes were soft, a ray     Lit them at times, which kings who saw     Would never dare to disobey.     Onwards through groves the pedlar sped     Till full in front the sunlit spire     Arose before him. Paths which led     To gardens trim in gay attire     Lay all around. And lo! the manse,     Humble but neat with open door!     He paused, and blest the lucky chance     That brought his bark to such a shore.     Huge straw ricks, log huts full of grain,     Sleek cattle, flowers, a tinkling bell,     Spoke in a language sweet and plain,     "Here smiling Peace and Plenty dwell."     Unconsciously he raised his cry,     "Shell-bracelets ho!" And at his voice     Looked out the priest, with eager eye,     And made his heart at once rejoice.     "Ho, Sankha pedlar! Pass not by,     But step thou in, and share the food     Just offered on our altar high,     If thou art in a hungry mood.     Welcome are all to this repast!     The rich and poor, the high and low!     Come, wash thy feet, and break thy fast,     Then on thy journey strengthened go."     "Oh thanks, good priest! Observance due     And greetings! May thy name be blest!     I came on business, but I knew,     Here might be had both food and rest     Without a charge; for all the poor     Ten miles around thy sacred shrine     Know that thou keepest open door,     And praise that generous hand of thine:     But let my errand first be told,     For bracelets sold to thine this day,     So much thou owest me in gold,     Hast thou the ready cash to pay?     "The bracelets were enamelled,--so     The price is high."--"How! Sold to mine?     Who bought them, I should like to know."     "Thy daughter, with the large black eyne,     Now bathing at the marble ghat."     Loud laughed the priest at this reply,     "I shall not put up, friend, with that;     No daughter in the world have I,     An only son is all my stay;     Some minx has played a trick, no doubt,     But cheer up, let thy heart be gay.     Be sure that I shall find her out."     "Nay, nay, good father, such a face     Could not deceive, I must aver;     At all events, she knows thy place,     'And if my father should demur     To pay thee'--thus she said,--'or cry     He has no money, tell him straight     The box vermilion-streaked to try,     That's near the shrine.'" "Well, wait, friend, wait!"     The priest said thoughtful, and he ran     And with the open box came back,     "Here is the price exact, my man,     No surplus over, and no lack.     "How strange! how strange! Oh blest art thou     To have beheld her, touched her hand,     Before whom Vishnu's self must bow,     And Brahma and his heavenly band!     Here have I worshipped her for years     And never seen the vision bright;     Vigils and fasts and secret tears     Have almost quenched my outward sight;     And yet that dazzling form and face     I have not seen, and thou, dear friend,     To thee, unsought for, comes the grace,     What may its purport be, and end?     "How strange! How strange! Oh happy thou!     And couldst thou ask no other boon     Than thy poor bracelet's price? That brow     Resplendent as the autumn moon     Must have bewildered thee, I trow,     And made thee lose thy senses all."     A dim light on the pedlar now     Began to dawn; and he let fall     His bracelet basket in his haste,     And backward ran the way he came;     What meant the vision fair and chaste,     Whose eyes were they,--those eyes of flame?     Swift ran the pedlar as a hind,     The old priest followed on his trace,     They reached the Ghat but could not find     The lady of the noble face.     The birds were silent in the wood,     The lotus flowers exhaled a smell     Faint, over all the solitude,     A heron as a sentinel     Stood by the bank. They called,--in vain,     No answer came from hill or fell,     The landscape lay in slumber's chain,     E'en Echo slept within her cell.     Broad sunshine, yet a hush profound!     They turned with saddened hearts to go;     Then from afar there came a sound     Of silver bells;--the priest said low,     "O Mother, Mother, deign to hear,     The worship-hour has rung; we wait     In meek humility and fear.     Must we return home desolate?     Oh come, as late thou cam'st unsought,     Or was it but an idle dream?     Give us some sign if it was not,     A word, a breath, or passing gleam."     Sudden from out the water sprung     A rounded arm, on which they saw     As high the lotus buds among     It rose, the bracelet white, with awe.     Then a wide ripple tost and swung     The blossoms on that liquid plain,     And lo! the arm so fair and young     Sank in the waters down again.     They bowed before the mystic Power,     And as they home returned in thought,     Each took from thence a lotus flower     In memory of the day and spot.     Years, centuries, have passed away,     And still before the temple shrine     Descendants of the pedlar pay     Shell bracelets of the old design     As annual tribute. Much they own     In lands and gold,--but they confess     From that eventful day alone     Dawned on their industry,--success.     Absurd may be the tale I tell,     Ill-suited to the marching times,     I loved the lips from which it fell,     So let it stand among my rhymes.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

""Shell-bracelets ho! Shell-bracelets ho!..."

Toru Dutt's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Jogadhya Uma."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"Part I.     Deep in the forest shades there dwelt     A Muni and his wife,     Blind, gray-haired, weak, they hourly felt     Their slender hol"

""Ho! Master of the wondrous art!     Instruct me in fair archery,     And buy for aye,--a grateful heart     That will not grudge to give thy f"

"Savitri was the only child     Of Madra's wise and mighty king;     Stern warriors, when they saw her, smiled,     As mountains smile to see th"

"Near Hastings, on the shingle-beach,     We loitered at the time     When ripens on the wall the peach,     The autumn's lovely prime.     Far"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"Part I.     Deep in the forest shades there dwelt..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.