Shri Guru Leelamrit (The Nectar of Teacher’s Sport) by
Pujya Shri Rang Avadhoot
Put into English by:
Shri Shantilal Thaker, M.A. B.T., Vidya-Bhasker
Page 7
Chapter IV – SHANDILI
There was the city of Pratishthan on the banks of the river Goda. In it there was living a Brahmin, Kaushik by name. Shandili was his wife. She was a chaste woman. He got infatuated with a prostitute. As a result he contacted a disease. There was pus oozing out of his limbs. He became deformed. He had wasted all his money on that prostitute. Once he went to the house of that prostitute. She despised him and turned him away. He returned home. Shandili welcomed him gladly. She joined her hands in salutation to him. She put him in the bed and began to serve him tirelessly. She changed his pus-soiled clothes now and then, gave him a soft towel-bath. He was surprised to see his wife’s wonderful devotion, although he had neglected her all the time. He apologized to her and praised her. She replied that she was not doing anything wonderful. Everybody minded himself or herself. He was not at all different from her, separate from her. Months passed away, and by her single-minded attendance on his sickbed and punctilious service, he became better. Then he began to say, ” Look, you are wonderful, but I cannot forget the moonlike face of that my beloved prostitute. You have, no doubt, given me a new lease of life, but today I am very eager to meet her. She gave me such sex-pleasure as I have never found with you. Oh, if I could go to her house ! ” Shandili replied, ” Lord, don’t worry. I will take you to her tonight on my shoulders.” When night came, she took out a little casket in which she kept her ornaments she had brought from her father’s house. She took it with her, tied in the fringe of her sari. She softly and gently carried Kaushik on her shoulders. She was careful that he received no jerk or jolt. She avoided streetlights so that her husband’s prestige may not suffer.
Reaching to the prostitute’s house, she gently put her husband on the sofa of the drawing-room. She went within, and giving the ornaments to the prostitute, she requested her to receive her husband kindly that night, for he was mad to see her that night. Kaushik was admitted to the prostitute’s inner apartment. He spent an hour with her, and came out panting, exhausted. Shandili allowed him to rest on the sofa for ten minutes, and then putting him on her shoulders, left the prostitute’s house. It was midnight.
Now on the way a strange thing was happening. A thief had stolen away from the royal palace the jewellery-box of the king. The policemen and guards got his scent and chased him. In a hurry he dropped the box near Mandavya, the disciple of the sage Markandeya. He was sitting in meditation outside the city in a solitary place. The policemen thought him to be the thief, for the jewellery-box was found near him. He was taken to the king, who ordered him to be put on a stake. He was put in the public square on the piercing point of the stake in the part of his abdomen, and his body was made to revolve on it, so that the piercing point would slowly and painfully go deeper in his body. While Shandili was carrying-Kaushik on her shoulders, his foot touched the body of sage Mandavya with force, and the revolution became quicker and therefore more painful. In extreme pain, the sage Mandavya gave out a curse, ” He, who by his touch was the cause of this excruciating pain to me, shall not see sunrise tomorrow.”
Shandili came home with her husband Kaushik. She uttered forth a resolve, ” Oh Sun-god, hear my words. If I am a chaste woman, if I have not seen another man’s face with a lustful desire even in dream, if I am faithful to my husband in thought, word and deed, you will not rise except when I give you order to rise again.” The next morning the sun did not rise. It was all dark. Birds, beasts, human beings did not know how to perform their daily duties. Sacrifices came to a standstill.
Nobody could tell the time. All were puzzled. Eight days passed in that state o things. Gods went to the Creator and complained about the chaos. God Creator replied, ” A chaste woman’s power is very great. Even the sun has to obey h orders. Go to Sati Anasuya, the mother of Dattatreya. Request her to approach Shandili and to persuade her to withdraw her orders. Only then will the sun and people be happy.” The Gods acted according to the Creator’s advice. Anasuya went to Shandili and said, ” Sister, look at the piteous condition of all the beings of the world. A Sati – a chaste woman should have compassion for all in her heart Withdraw your orders, and let the sun rise.” Shandili replied, ” I am fortunate today to have your holy sight, mother. But the sage Mandavya has cursed my husband unjustly. He should have cursed me to death, for it was my fault. I was carrying my husband on the shoulders. I was in a hurry to go home to avoid public gaze and scandal. I would have succumbed to death willingly. But this injustice I could not bear.” Anasuya said, ” Don’t worry. Let the sun rise. I will bring Kaushi your husband, back to life by my power of chastity. Rely on my words.” Shandi withdrew her orders. The sun rose, and Kaushik dropped down dead in the bed.
Sati Anasuya took Kaushik’s body in her lap and spoke, “ If I am a Sati, an have never looked upon another man with a lustful eye even in dream, let Kaushi arise, come back to life.” Kaushik yawned, and stretching his arms, arose. He thanked Shandili for giving him second time a lease of life. Shandili said, ” No, fall at the feet of mother Anasuya, who has given life to you and to me, both She is the holy mother of Lord Dattatreya, the great Yogeshwar.” Kaushik fell at Anasuya’s feet. She blessed him and Shandili both. Kaushik lived thereafter for a full hundred years.
The Sage Mandavya was saved from the stake by gods and other sages, who went to the king and told the whole story about Kaushik and Shandili. The sage Mandavya had to suffer for a short while the excruciating pain of the stake, for while in play, as a child, he had pierced a small bird with a thorn. He had to pay so dearly for that sin.
next page
|