Final Sivaji
Final Sivaji
SHIVAJI IN STORIES
EDITORIAL
he Tercentenary of Chhatrapati
Shivaji s Coronation is being
celebrated all over the country
during the year that commenced on June
2, 1974, and the present volume conceived
as part of the celebrations is now brought
out as signifying their concluding phase.
It may be recalled that the idea of the
coronation day celebration was first mooted
by Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak in 1886
as a symbolic expression of the aspiration
of the people for sustained freedom and in
order to mark the beginning of New Indias
struggle for independence from what has
been described as the rule of the Mughals
of the modern era. The celebration, as
then suggested, came off in April 1896 at
Rajgarh, and sought to stress the truly
nationalist, revolutionary and antiimperialist direction regarded as necessary
for the struggle and to provide the new
movement for Swaraj with the dynamic
inspiration of a popular, national hero.
Lokmanya Tilak, who used to visit Sinhagad
every year and stay there for sometime to
imbibe the spirit of Shivaji, firmly believed
and declared that The only consciousness
which we as a nation can proudly retain
and foster ought to have its springs in
Hindutva. Hence he rightly saw and shared
with his compatriots, the appropriateness
of projecting the image of Shivaji as a
SHIVAJI IN STORIES
SHIVAJI IN STORIES
SHIVAJI IN STORIES
SHIVAJI - SYMBOL OF
NATIONAL RENAISSANCE IN STORY
Prof. K.N.VASWANI
Shivaji Stories
True of this great, glorious tradition of our
people, the great, impressive, dynamic and
heroic figure of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj
too has attracted and inspired our people,
our poets and our writers, in the interest
of our people, to fire them with idealism,
energy and fervour, with zeal for national
service and the spirit of nation-building,
to weave many stories around some or the
other of the many exploits and adventures
of Shivaji Maharaj, a hero among men, an
ideal son of an ideal mother, Jija Bai, an
exemplary pupil, a devoted disciple of his
Guru Samarth Ramdas, a fit friend and true,
a soldier and a commander of ability, skill,
and judgement, quick in his judgements,
quick in his movements, a master of guerilla
warfare, which is now being made so much
of, even by that successful master of
warfare, Mao of China, and which had won
for Shivaji the strange appellation and
description of the mountain rat, which
epithet can be interpreted as it has already
been interpreted by different historians,
differently, both as a compliment as also
as a slight or a caricature.
Yes, Shivaji has fired the imagination of
our people, as of our poets and writers, as
a national hero, held high in esteem, as a
nation builder, a dreamer of the dream of
the Hindu Nation, a daring and fearless and
far-slighted freedom-fighter, who also was
successful in many ways even as an able
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A MONKS
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REMINISCENCES
KESHAV KRIPA
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He has a name
THE room was dark with drawn shutters, gleaming oil lamps purifying fires rising
from the sacrificial offering filled the room with an ethereal air. At times the watching
faces of the priests was startlingly clear and sometimes veiled in the translucent
curtain of the ascending smoke that rose like a prayer. Jija Bai lay silent and at
rest. She felt the absence of her husband. The ceremonies at the birth of a Hindu
boy are numerous, as at all other occasions in the drama of Hindu life, where the
chief actor is the father.
As was the custom among the Maharashtrians, some loving hands laid the babe in a
winnowing fan, kissed his head in benediction and let a drop of honey fall through
the circlet of a gold ring into its mouth, thus symbolically invoking the sweetness of
life on the new born. Days rolled on in quick succession. For Jija Bai it had been a
mixture of bitter-sweetness. Bitterness at the absence of her husband, tempered
by the sweetness of all that a new mother experiences at the sight of her little new
arrival. Each day would have brought out its own calendar of events, as the young
ones quick senses responded to the environment and beauty around. The gurgles
and helpless flaying of tiny hands and legs were a sheer rhythm of movement under
the loving gaze of the mother.
Soon after the birth ceremony come others. The most important one is the christening
at which the newcomer is to be assigned a name. The mothers heart beat in
excitement as the moment arrived. Dressed in all her finery she held her trembling
little mass on her lap. Through the fading mists of the past and the dim horizons of
the future the mother recognized the Goddess Bhavani, as she stood before her
chosen instrument. A gleam of recognition lit up the young mothers countenance ;
she who had sought Her blessings bent and whispered the name Shiva into the tiny
ears. That was Her name and that was what Jija Bai chose to call her baby. He is
now known to all as Shivaji the name that came as a gift from Divine.
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TRICENTENARY COMMEMORATES
HIS CORONATION
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THE REDEEMER
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Aspirations for
a New Order
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The Tryst
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The Butcher
of Bijapur
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THE BAIT
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fort is built on a summit of the same flattopped rock which rises up dizzy precipices,
nearly fifty feet high. Shivaji captured this
fort in 1670 and added it to his collection
of other strongholds.
Purandhar, the bone of contention, was
repeatedly besieged by the Bijapurians and
Moghuls. Twice wrested from the invaders,
the defence of this fort lost for Shivaji
Murar Baji, one of his ablest soldiers. Stout
in defence, wily in attack, this fort was
the witness of many pitched battles.
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The Re-Union
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A NATIONAL HERO IN
THE MOULDING
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THE TRAITOR
THAT
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The
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BIRTH OF RAIGARH
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SAMBHAJI MOHITE
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SANT RAMDAS
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PRATAPGARH
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A SPEEDY FOLLOW UP
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SHIVAJI
FESTIVAL
and tumbled
Like ripe leaves in the dusk of cataclysm,
Bengal still was deaf
To that thunderous trot of
marching Marathas.
At the dead of that storm tossed night
The court at Delhi wept desolate,
As the palace lights flickered out
So ebbed the glow of the Moghul Empire
Till it was put out, and left a carcass
To the screaming hungry vulture.
The flame died, and all that was left
Of a long Imperial rule
Was a heap of ashes scattered,
never to be seen.
That day on the borders of Bengal
The goddess of commerce
ushered a throne
In the dark tunnel running beside
a shop of merchandise
Anointing it with the sacred
waters of Ganga.
The measuring rod of merchandise
Assumed dimensions of a royal sceptre
Ere that night ended.
None knew that day where thou wert ;
Thou, the thoughtful Maratha hero
The noble son of Bharata Varsha
Thou wert buried in memory
When thy ochre flag streaked
no moreIn yonder blue skies.
The minds that delved into facts
And wrote down volumes of history
Did not read thy noble thought,
And called thee a dacoit
Laughing in derision That thou shalt seek a crown.
Thy loving gift of freedom to thy mother
Was labelled as a bandits adventure.
I rail the gathered volumes of
blundering history
And cry out the agony of my heart,
Stop ! Stop your vociferous tongue.
Thy false recordings shall not belie
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THE LEGENDARY
SWORD
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THE VICEGERENT
Translated by J.L.Das, from the
original Bengali poem
Pratinidhi of
Rabindranath Tagore
On the rampart of Satara Fort
Was seated Shivaji one fine morn
When he saw his Guru Ramdas
Go begging alms from door to door.
Pondered Shivaji : Strange, indeed,
That with a beggars bowl moves
the Guru,
In whose abode no want there is
Who at his command has resources all,
Before whom lies prostrate the monarch,
Still his avarice knows no bounds.
To me a vain endeavour it seems
Thirst to quench from a leaky vessel
In which water is poured night and day.
How much it needs
The beggars bowl to fill.
That instant a note he scribbled,
Summoned Balaji and to him he said,
When to the fort for alms
comes the Guru,
This note to him deliver.
Many were the way-fares and chariots
That strode past the Guru as he sang,
Oh Maheshwar, Oh Shankar !
To all else have you earth
and home given,
But to me only the path
have you assigned.
Mother Annapurna has of the universe
taken charge
And in Her joy do all thrive.
But, me from such a Mother,
Oh ! mendicant,
Have you snatched and made
your follower.
As his hymn he ended, and took
his mid-day bath
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A PROFILE
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A REFRAIN
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Mores of Javli
Shahji was released in 1653. Shivaji the
Great was relieved from anxiety on that
score, and was therefore free once more
to pursue his ideal further. This time it
was Javli and its Raja, Chandrarao More,
who claimed his attention. This state of
Javli included a large slip of the Ghat Matha,
the borderland between the Dekhan and
the Konkan and if Shivaji the Great was to
be able to pass between these two tracts
in safety, he must take possession of Javli
or form an alliance with its ruler. The state
was, therefore, of great strategic
importance. But the obdurate Chandrarao
More refused to enter into any alliance. It
was also impossible to attack him openly
with any reasonable hope of success owing
to his strong position in men, money and
hill forts. To these general considerations
was added another of a personal nature Chandrarao More must have been privy to
the treacherous attack made upon Shivaji
the Great by Baji Shamraj. Incensed at
this, the Maratha leader decided to get rid
of More. The various hill-forts of the Ghat
Matha were then immediately stormed and
the whole of the territory of the Mores fell
into the hands of Shivaji. The terror of his
name had now spread all over the central
Deccan and practically every independent
chief, including the Savants of Vali, was
brought under his sway, the only exception
being the Siddis of the important port of
Janjira. Thus the authority of Bijapur, north
of Kolhapur was almost extinguished.
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A RARE FEAT
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THE SCALES
OF JUSTICE
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AT THE FEET
OF TUKARAM
By D.V.PATUKAR
and S.K.DEODHAR
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THE COUNTERFEIT
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THE WIND
BLOWS SILENTLY
SMT. NAYANTARA DESAI
Translated from the
original in Marathi
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asked
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THE CRESCENDO
Extract from The Rise
and Fall of the Maratha
Empire by R.V.NADARNI
The Lull
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FREEDOM THROUGH
A BASKET
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THE BARGAIN
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THE FORTRESS
IN THE SEA
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DEATH OF A HERO
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Repeatedly, Shivaji
had raided the
fortified citadels of
Moghul power,
crippled
the
d e f e n c e
arrangements of
the
Moghuls,
returned with rich
booties. These
raids had boosted
his confidence and
proved that the
Moghuls were not
invincible. In turn,
these
raids
created in the
hearts of those
who were pitted against him a grumbling
admiration for his tactics mixed with mortal
fear of his hurricane attacks.
In this mood of exultation, Jija Bai surveyed
the sprawling scenery. She saw the
Sahyadri Ranges, standing almost at the
edge of the horizon, with the blue sky
dipping down and kissing the top of the
mountain ranges. The terrain, uneven,
rolling into valleys and suddenly rising to
great heights in the shape of sharp peaks,
all dressed in green, created a cavalcade
of emotions in her. She imagined that she
could hear the tumbling, gushing, mad
water-falls, rumbling over rocks, breaking
into bits over sharp protuberances, falling
faster and faster, glistening in the sun,
dancing their way down to the plains. She
visualised, in her mind, the music of the
parakeet, the trumpet of the elephant, the
roar of the tiger and the call of the wolf.
Then, she espied the silhouette of Sinhgad
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BACK TO BURHANPUR
As the camp was being wound up, an unknown person suddenly appeared before
the Khan, a sealed letter in hand. As the
Khan shared at the stranger, the man
delivered the letter and vanished as
elusively as he had appeared. The Khan
looked at the seal and his eyes opened
wide. The letter was from Shivaji !
With unsteady hands the Khan opened the
letter and read. Khan Sahib, you entered
my country as a guest and searched for
the host. You met the host in the mountains
of Pen and, I hope, you received all the
hospitality we reserve for guests like you.
Do you think you are the first Mughal
general to report back that you have
conquered Maratha country and are about
to capture Shivaji ? For three years wellknown Mughal generals coming before you
have reported the same thing. I feel sorry
for your Emperor. How long is he going to
suffer from such false reports? May truth
be with you - truth as you saw it at Pen.
In a very small voice the young, once vain
Khan repeated his order to his depleted
army - Back to Burhanpur.
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A HUNDRED
GOLD COINS
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CHATRASAL BUNDELA
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BUSINESS IS
BUSINESS
Surya Rao
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THE PRELUDE
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asked
II
Gaga Bhatt stayed with Masaheb. He had
become the centre of attraction not only
for Pachad folks but also for the towns
and villages situated around.
By that time, the intention of Masaheb,
and the Secretary to have a coronation
ceremony, was known to all the people
around Pachad. In fact, the whole of
Deccan longed for the day. The only
difficulty was to obtain the willingness of
Shivaji himself. He did not pay heed even
to the words of his mother on that count !
People wondered, what would happen !
A ray of hope in the form of Gaga Bhatt
illumined their hearts. Gaga Bhatt was the
most famous Pandit from Kashi. It was
learnt that he had taken a vow, (with the
holy water of Ganges in his hand) that he
would see a sovereign Emperor sworn in
Deccan. If he did not, he would never
return to Kashi. All the people, rich and
poor, big and small, Brahmins, Kshatriyas,
farmers, weavers, blacksmiths, gold-smiths,
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III
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IV
Jija Bai sat on a cot. Shivaji was beside
her. She stroked his back with trembling
hands as tears ran down her cheeks. With
a choked voice she spoke :
Once the ceremony is performed, I shall
be free to leave this world.
Shivaji remonstrated, Then I am taking
my decision back.
Dont talk like that, my son. The dream
of centuries is to be fulfilled. Please do
not say No. This body has become old.
It will die within a few days. You know
that all our wishes cannot be fulfilled. It is
the law of life that one does not live forever.
Man likes to possess a thing, and once he
gets it, he thinks of another. That is an
unending chain. Your case is different. It
was the wish of the people for a number
of years. Only your consent was not there.
Now we have got it and you should not
turn back, Jija Bai explained carefully.
It shall be as you wish, Shivaji consented.
My blessings are always with you.
The news spread like wild-fire, and the joy
of the people all over Maharashtra knew
no bounds.
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THE CORONATION OF
CHHATRAPATI SHIVAJI MAHARAJ
PROF. M. Y. KHAN
Introduction
according
to
Vedic rites and
assume the title
of Chhatrapati.
(It seems that
this title was
already intended
to be taken
when Shivaji
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THE SOUVENIR
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THE RETURN
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AN ENCOUNTER
WITH THE TUSKER
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THE
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KNIGHT
N the scorching heat of the midday sun, two riders were galloping
along a road leading from Golkonda to
Bijapur. Only two months back it had
teemed with life, with throngs of people
on their way to Raigarh to watch the
coronation of Chhatrapati Shivaji. But now
it was desolate. The two riders passed
through village after village and all were
deserted. Then one of the riders asked
the other : Why isnt anybody living in
these villages ? Are they not within the
Swaraj .?
The question came from
Netaji palker.
Alas, Yes, answered his companion, none
other than Shivaji, but they are so far
out on the border that we cannot
effectively protect them from Mughal
marauders ..
With the sun high overhead, the profusely
prespiring riders halted under the shade of
a tree and looked about for a pond or steam
to slake their thirst.
There, by the side of a lovely hut, is a
pool .. Shivaji pointed, and the two led
their mounts in that direction.
The hut stood almost on the bund of the
pool, and looked deserted.
Netaji led the two horses to the edge of
the water and stiffened somewhat, as a
muffled sob came from within the hut.
Shivaji also heard it and motioned to his
companion. Swiftly, Netaji went to the
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HER DEFIANCE
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Janardanpant.
The royal company reached Bhimantole in
a gay mood. The steep climb started there
onwards. Down below was the deep valley
: and the peak of Shri Shaila, kissing the
blue skies, challenged the human breath.
That highest peak is known as Kailas ;
Janardanpant pointed to the peak and said,
To see Mallikarjuna from the peak is a very
sacred experience.
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His Majesty
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It may
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impregnable.
Sambhaji attacked
Bhoopalgarh with the aid of a strong army.
Firangoji Narsala was the general in charge
and Sambhaji sent a messenger to him and
asked for the fort gates to be thrown open
to him.
Firangoji was in a dilemma. If he obeyed
the order of Sambhaji, he would lose the
fort. If he disobeyed it would amount to
disobeying his own master. He decided to
leave the fort along with Vithal Pant Bhale
Rao and report the matter to Shivaji. Then
both of them left the Raigarh, leaving the
fort unmanned.
On the next day the fort was opened.
Sambhaji and Diler Khan entered it. There
was no resistance. All the Marathas
surrendered to Sambhaji with folded hands.
Diler Khan did not let go the opportunity.
He ordered the amputation of the right hand
of each of the seven hundred Maratha
soldiers in the fort.
Meanwhile, Firangoji and Vithal Pant Bhale
Rao came to Maharaj and related the whole
story. Shivaji was stunned. He (Sambhaji)
came to the fort as an enemy and not a
Prince. Why did you not kill him ? It was
your mistake. Hereafter, do not yield to
such sentiments.
He immediately passed orders to all his
generals that Sambhaji should be resisted,
wherever he launched an attack.
Realisation dawned on Sambhaji as he
witnessed the atrocities of Diler Khan. He
had captured and enslaved hundreds of
men and women. Many women put an end
to their lives in order to escape the
humiliations inflicted by his men.
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WAR WITH
THE ENGLISH
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THE EPISTLE
OTHING
emphasises
Shivajis role as a nationbuilder of India more than
this letter which he, as the
champion of the subjects of the
Empire, wrote to Aurangazeb at this
time. Its tone and dignity, the
admonitions administered in it, the
appeal to a higher sense of
humanity and finally the warning
conveyed to the Emperor to desist
from his ruinous steps make the
letter one of the important
documents of Indian history. Here
are extracts from the letter.
To the Emperor Alamgir. This firm
well wisher Shivaji, deeply grateful
for divine favour and your kindness
as clear as daylight, begs to inform Your
Majesty as follow :
I returned from your presence without
seeking your permission. It is my
misfortune. May your kindness be felt by
everybody. As a well-wisher I am placing
some matters before you.
Recently it has come to my notice that
owing to your war against me, your
treasury has become empty. You have
decided to meet the expenditure through
the imposition of Jaziya on the Hindus.
Your Majesty ! Akbar, the founder of your
Empire ruled the land for fifty-two years.
He had adopted the excellent policy of
treating all on a footing of equality
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THE
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CLOSING
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STRAINS
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ADVICE TO VENKOJI
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broke in-steps,
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SACRIFICE
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SHIVASHAHI OR RAMARAJYA ?
MUKUND PARKHI
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Chimnaji continued
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Teacher :
Welcome to you.
Good morning.
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OR
many
years
Muazzam
maintained cordial relations with
Shivaji without the knowledge of his
father Aurangazeb. In fact, he went so
far as to aid Shivajis men against the cruel
plans of his father.
Thirteen years later Muazzam sat quietly
in his luxuriously decorated Shamiana. He
had been living in the same tent for several
months now. It was fringed with gorgeous
brocades. The muslim curtains inside
silently proclaimed their exorbitant costs.
Soft satin cushions of every conceivable
colour, delicately embroidered, were strewn
over the mattress of imported silk. A
hucca was kept close. The decanter on
the stool which stood beside the cushions
was half empty. Probably, it remained so
for quite some time. The court dancer
had been waiting in her parlour for hours,
but she received no summons from
Shahzada. His personal assistant dared
not disturb him. Shahzada was not living
in 1679. He had geared himself back into
the past. A series of events swiftly moved
before his half-closed eyes.
I dont know why, but I always had a
longing to see Shivaji Raje. I have heard a
lot of him. His magnificent personality, soft
but very expressive smile, politeness and
modesty in speech and his art of using
right words at right places. All these
qualities together had captivated me. At
once I decided that I should forge friendship
with this man. I did not care what my
father thought. But why ? I can very well
keep it secret. I was told to meet Sambaji.
He was the exact replies of his father, with
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THE BENEDICTION
I
The Scene : Pratap Garh Fort.
Occasion : Meeting with Afzal Khan
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II
Time : The days before the Coronation
The Scene : The Shrine at Pratapgad
The coronation ceremonies lasted nearly a
month. First Shivaji visited the temple of
the Mother Goddess at Pratapgad. He
presented the shrine with an umbrella of
pure gold, forty-two pounds in weight.
Then, accompanied by a few followers, he
entered the temple and passed many days
absorbed in vigil and prayer. While
prostrate in prayer before the altar he fell
into a trance, and from his mouth a faint
thin voice, which those present declared
must have been that of Mother Goddess
Herself, began to prophecy the future
history of the Maratha State, the final
collapse of the Moghul Empire, the entry
of the Marathas into Delhi, the twentyseven generation rule of Shivanis
descendants and finally the voice
concluded, The scepter shall pass into the
hands of a strange people with red faces.
III
The Scene : The Temple at Sri Saila.
Occasion : Shivajis Pilgrimage
Now, for the last time we see Shivaji
silently slipping away slipping away from
his soldiers and crossing the river Krishna
accompanied only by Hanumante and just
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LEGENDS AND
THEIR MEANING
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SHIVAJIS LAST
ILLNESS AND DEATH,
3 RD APRIL, 1680
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To a mighty warrior
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WHO SHALL
UN-KING THEE?
SAROJINI NAIDU