Chapter 25
the bed.’ ‚The two of us will enjoy sexual pleasure to the full before the King returns.‛
As one who treasured his morality, the Prince gave a stiff reply:-
‚O! Royal Queen mother ... you have become my mother ever since the demise of
my mother. You are a married woman, I have never in all my life looked at a
woman with a legal husband with concupiscence, and how would a self-restrained
person like me commit such a hideous crime in collusion with you?‛
After making three or four vain attempts to make the Prince yield to her temptations, the
Queen resorted to threatening him, asking: ‚Won't you obey my order?‛ ‚Yes .... I won't,‛
replied the Prince boldly and bluntly. Whereupon, she made it plain to him: ‚I will lodge a
false allegation against you with the King, so that he will break your head into pieces.‛
‚You may slander me as you like but I won't yield to your temptations,‛ he left her
chamber after putting her to shame.
The Queen, being conscious of her own guilt, made up her mind to save her own skin by
lodging a false allegation against the Prince with the King without delay, as her life was at
stake, lest the prince might reveal her secrets before she could see the King. She got her
body scratched all over with her own fingers and lay on her bed without taking any food,
feigning illness. She instructed her attendants how they should answer the King when he
asked them about her, in due course.
The King entered the City after circumambulating the city and sat on the throne. When he
could not see his Queen, he enquired about her and her attendant reported that she was not
well. He went to her chamber and asked: ‚Darling Queen .... what ails you?‛ She pretended
not to hear his words for two or three times and, at last, she made this reply: ‚O King what
has made you to press for an answer that I loathed to give. Please keep silent to save me
from shame. My case is quite different from those of the other married women.‛ On
hearing such an insinuation, the King asked her: ‚Do tell me at once who has done wrong
to you and I will break the head of the criminal,‛ in a severe tone. In response to the King,
she asked this question: ‚O King .... under whose charge was this city kept when you left?‛
‚It was left under the charge of my son, the Crown Prince,‛ replied the King. The Queen
then started to tell her fabricated story to calumniate the Crown Prince: ‚Your Majesty...
the very person you had left in charge of the city, Prince Paduma, entered my room all
alone and tried to make me yield to his temptations, and when I beseeched him meekly not
to offend his mother, he retorted rudely: ‘Is there any other King than myself .... I will
keep you in house and enjoy sexual pleasure to the full with you.’ When I refused to yield
to him, he pulled me by my hair, beat me all over my body and then throwing me down on
the floor, he outraged me and left my chamber.‛
The King ordered The Execution of Prince MahÈ Paduma
The King lost his sense of reasoning through anger, like a venomous cobra, and ordered
the execution of the Prince. The executioners entered the residence of the Prince, beat him
most severely, bound his hands at the back and brought him out of his house with a ring of
red-primrose round his neck, like a prisoner given the life sentence.
The Prince knew that the Queen was responsible for the whole affair. He followed the
executioners complaining: ‚O executors... I have done nothing against the King, I am
innocent.‛ The whole city was shocked and tensed with fear, and the citizens exchanged
views among themselves: ‚The King has misunderstood Prince MahÈ Paduma, and ordered
his execution on the strength of his wife's false allegation.‛ They rallied round at the feet
of the Prince, crying and sobbing aloud: ‚O Crown Prince... the kind of sentence passed
upon you is not just and reasonable.‛ They kept on weeping and crying at the top of their
voices around him.
When the executioners had brought the Prince before him, the King, in a fit of temper, at
once ordered the execution of the Prince, by throwing him into a steep chasm (usual place
where robbers were usually thrown down) with his head down. In passing the order, the
King remarked that, the Prince, though his own son, was guilty of impersonating him and
offending the Queen. Whereupon, the Crown Prince protested: ‚Royal father... I am not