"The Love Story of Dushyant And Shakuntala"...
The
legend of the exquisitely beautiful Shakuntala and the mighty king
Dushyant is a thrilling love story from the epic Mahabharata, which the
great ancient poet Kalidasa retold in his immortal play
'Abhijnanashakuntalam'.
While on a hunting trip, King Dushyant of the Puru dynasty meets the hermit-girl Shakuntala. They fall in love with each other at
first sight and, in the absence of her father, Shakuntala weds the king
in a ceremony of 'Ghandharva'-a form of marriage by mutual consent with
mother Nature as the witness. When the time comes for Dushyant to
return to his palace, he promises to send an envoy to escort her to his
castle.As a fond remembrance he gives her a signet ring.
One
day when hermit Durvasa stops at her hut for hospitality, Shakuntala,
lost in her love thoughts, fails to hear his calls.The temperamental
sage turns back and curses her: "He whose thoughts have engrossed you
would not remember you anymore." On the plea of her companions, the
enraged sage relents and adds a condition to his curse-statement: "He
can only recall you upon producing some significant souvenir."
Days roll by and nobody from the palace comes to fetch her. Her father
sends her to the royal court for their reunion, as she was pregnant with
Dushyant's child. While travelling, Shakuntala's signet-ring
accidentally drops into the river and gets lost.
When
Shakuntala presents herself before the king, Dushyant, under the spell
of the curse, fails to acknowledge her as his wife. Heart-broken, she
pleads to the gods for help. The spell is broken when a fisherman finds
the signet ring in the stomach of a fish - the same ring that Shakuntala
had lost on her way to the court. The king suffers from an intense
feeling of guilt and injustice. Shakuntala forgives Dushyant and they
are reunited happily.
She gives birth to a male child. He was
called Bharat, her son, grew older. Surrounded only by wild animals,
Bharat grew to be a strong youth and made a sport of opening the mouths
of tigers and lions and counting their teeth.
After whom "India" gets her name.. !
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