SCENE III
Bappa's cot on the hillside.
Bappa, the Captain, Coomood, decorating the cot with flowers.
BAPPA
Where was she when you had the script from
her?
CAPTAIN
Singing of battle on the rocks alone
With wrestling winds in her wild hair and
raiment,
A joyous Oread.
BAPPA
Said she anything?
CAPTAIN
She gave it me with glad and smiling eyes
And laughed: "This for my noble Bheel, my
sovereign
Of caterans, my royal beast of prey,
These to their mighty owners."
COOMOOD
CUMARY
Will you read it?
BAPPA
(reads)
"Cateran, I have given thy captain letters
which when thou hast read them, fail not to despatch. I have sent for teachers
for thee to beat thee into modesty and lesson thee in better behaviour to a lady
and princess —"
What letters has she given thee, captain? These?
CAPTAIN
To Pratap, Rao of Ichalgurh; —and one
To Toraman the Scythian.
BAPPA
Deliver them.
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Thou'lt find at Dongurh both these warlike
princes.
No, I'll not read them.
Exit Captain.
COOMOOD CUMARY
Let me hear the rest.
BAPPA
"Cateran, I will show thee the sum of thy
bold and flagitious offences, though I dare not to hope that it will make thee
ashamed. Thou hast laid injurious hands on a royal maiden, being thyself a mere
Bheel and outlaw and of no parentage; thou hast carried me most violently to
this thy inconsiderable and incommodious hut, treating the body of a princess as
if it were a sack of potatoes; thou hast unmercifully and feloniously stripped
my body with thy own rude Bheel hands of more ornaments than thou hast seen in
thy lifetime and didst hurt me most cruelly in the deed, though thou vainly
deniest it; thou hast compelled and dost yet compel me, the princess of Edur, by
the infamous lack of women-servants in thy hut, to minister to thee, a common
Bheel, menially with my own royal hands, so that my fingers are sore with
scrubbing thy rusty sword which thou hast never used yet on anything braver than
a hill-jackal, and my face is still red with leaning over the fire cooking thy
most unroyal meals for thee; and to top these crimes, thou hast in thy
robustious robber fashion taken a kiss from my lips without troubling thyself to
ask for it, and thou yet keepest it with thee. All which are high misdoings and
mortal offences; yet would I have pardoned them knowing thee to be no more than
a boy and a savage. But now thou darest to tell me that I, a Rajpoot maiden, am
in love with thee, a Bheel, and that even if I deny it, thou carest not; for I
am thine already whether I will or no, thy captive and thy slave-girl. This is
not to be borne. So I have written to my noble suitors of Ichalgurh and Scythia
to avenge me upon thy Bheel body; I doubt not, they will soon carry thy head to
Edur in a basket, if thou hast the manners to permit them. Yet since thy
followers call thee Smiter of the Forest and
Page – 787
Lion of the Hills, let me see thee smite
more than jackals and rend braver than flesh of mountain-deer. Cateran, when
thou trundlest the Scythian down-hill like a ball, thou mayst marry me in spite
of thy misdeeds, if thou darest; and when thou showest
thyself a better man than the Chouhan of Ichalgurh, which is impossible, thou
mayst even keep me for thy slave-girl and I will not deny thee. Meanwhile, thou
shalt give me a respite till the seventh morn of the May. Till then presume not
to touch me. Thy captive, Comol Cumary."
Why, here's a warlike and most hectoring letter,
Coomood.
COOMOOD CUMARY
She pours her happy heart out so
In fantasies; I never knew her half so wayward.
The more her soul is snared between your hands,
The more her lips will chide you.
BAPPA
Can you tell
Why she has set these doughty warriors on me,
Coomood?
COOMOOD
CUMARY
You cannot read a woman's mind.
It's to herself a maze inextricable
Of vagrant impulses with half-guessed tangles
Of feeling her own secret thoughts are blind to.
BAPPA
But yet?
COOMOOD
CUMARY
Her sudden eager headstrong passion
Would justify its own extravagance
By proving you unparalleled. Therefore she picks
Earth's brace of warriors out for your opponents.
Page – 788
BAPPA
Pratap the Chouhan, Rao of lchalgurh!
To meet him merely were a lifetime's boast;
But to cross swords with him! Oh, she has
looked
Into my heart.
COOMOOD CUMARY
You'll give her seven days ?
BAPPA
Not hours, — the dainty rebel! Great
Ichalgurh
Will wing here like an eagle; soon I'll meet him
And overthrow, who feel a giant's strength,
Coomood, since yesterday. My fate mounts sunward.
COOMOOD
CUMARY
Ours, Bappa, has already arrived. Our sun
Rose yesterday upon the way to Dongurh.
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