On the right, seeing his sons and Sita clad in robes of bark, Dasaratha loses consciousness and falls from the throne by Indian School

On the right, seeing his sons and Sita clad in robes of bark, Dasaratha loses consciousness and falls from the throne

(Add 15296 (1) f.53r, On the right, seeing his sons and Sita clad in robes of bark, Dasaratha loses consciousness and falls from the throne. The three exiles kneel before the queens. Sita is embraced by Kausalya, who reminds her unnecessarily that her firs)


Indian School

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On the right, seeing his sons and Sita clad in robes of bark, Dasaratha loses consciousness and falls from the throne by Indian School. Available as an art print on canvas, photo paper, watercolor board, uncoated paper or Japanese paper.
British Library, London, UK / Bridgeman Images
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€ 122
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Dasaratha, enthroned in durbar, tells the Brahmins Vasistha and Vamadeva and his minister Sumantra of his intention to resign his throne to Rama as regent; on the left, these three summon Rama and Laksmana. Above, four Brahmins begin In the throne room at Nandigrama, Bharata places on the throne Rama Sumantra brings Rama and Laksmana in a chariot to Dasaratha Sumantra Arrives at the Palace (detail) The procession returns to Ayodhya, along the bottom of the painting, the sorrowful and deserted city being the haunt of cats and owls. Bharata and Shatrughna take their leave of the queens and tell Vasistha that they will retire to N In the throne room at Ayodhya, King Dasaratha is seated with his four sons, his minister Sumantra and his chief priest Vasistha. Yudhajit, Queen Kaikeyi In his sons Bharata and Shatrughna Perform Funeral Rites (detail) On the right, Rama leaves Dasaratha Rama and Lakshmana Bound, from the On the Right, Dasaratha Again Tells Rama He Will Make Him King, with Vasistha, Laksmana, Another Brahmin and Ministers in Attendance. Rama and Laksmana Then Leave the King to Call on Kausalya on the Left, Who, Dressed in White, is Wor Dasaratha Had Previously Ordered Sumantra to Summon His Queens and All His Wives, Who Now Surround the King When Sumantra Brings the Exiles in to Make Their Farewells. Dasaratha Tries to Persuade Rama Not to Go to the Forest Despite the entreaties of his brother to return to rule Ayodhya, Rama remains adamant in adhering to his father On the right in the palace, the princes ask the king for teachers of religion, arts and sciences, while above two ladies at a carpeted jharokha window look down on them on the left as they practise horsemanship on the exercise ground The four messengers on horseback approach the city of Kekaya, while attendants try to wake Bharata, who has had alarming dreams about his father. In one of them, shown below, the king dressed plainly, and seated on an iron (here blue) The princes in their chariot drive through the main street at Ayodhya, wondering at the change in the city since they left it, and then enter the palace, with questioning gestures. In an upper room, a Brahmin and three ministers converse. Bharadvaja, seated outside his hut with other ascetics and deer, enquires of the princes whether they have enjoyed his hospitality. He tells them and their companions that Rama is living in Citrakuta. At his request, the princes introduce themselves. Rama, his wife and brother ride off in a chariot driven by Sumantra and are surrounded by the grieving townspeople, whose tears lay the dust raised by the chariot The king is helped back into his palace by his queens. He repudiates Kaikeyi, telling her to dwell in the palace as a widow as he does not want to see her again, and is helped to bed by Kausalya and Sumitra, while the lesser queens m Through his magic powers, Bharadvaja has conjured up a palace in a pleasure ground for the entertainment and refreshment of his guests. Bharadvaja and the other ascetics and Brahmins sit in the throne-room, while the two princes fir Having finally persuaded his mother and brother to calmly accept his fate, Rama and Laksmana return to his own palace in the chariot, Rama The chariots of Vasistha and the princes, attended by various ministers and people, enter the town of Nandigrama The messengers, in an upper chamber, tell the princes to return to Ayodhya. Below in the throne-room, dressed for the journey, the princes say their farewells to King Kaikeyi and his son Yudhajit On the Left, Sumantra Returns to Ayodhya and Enters the Palace to Give Rama Sumantra arrives in a chariot at Rama Rama has not been able to dissuade Sita or Laksmana from accompanying him, and the three now give away all they possess. Seated in a pavilion on the left, Sita distributes her jewels and clothes to the townspeople, while the Brahmin Su Three chariots convey the king, his son and the two young princes through a bazaar. The fronts of the far shops are visible with merchants selling cloth, and the backs of the ones below. In his palace on the right, the elderly king, usi The princes go off to meet their other mothers in their zenana, but Kausalya and Sumitra, dressed in mourning saris of red and yellow, having heard of their return, have already set off to meet them. Kausalya reproaches Bharata for Bards, musicians and dancers arrive in the morning at the door of the king
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Dasaratha, enthroned in durbar, tells the Brahmins Vasistha and Vamadeva and his minister Sumantra of his intention to resign his throne to Rama as regent; on the left, these three summon Rama and Laksmana. Above, four Brahmins begin In the throne room at Nandigrama, Bharata places on the throne Rama Sumantra brings Rama and Laksmana in a chariot to Dasaratha Sumantra Arrives at the Palace (detail) The procession returns to Ayodhya, along the bottom of the painting, the sorrowful and deserted city being the haunt of cats and owls. Bharata and Shatrughna take their leave of the queens and tell Vasistha that they will retire to N In the throne room at Ayodhya, King Dasaratha is seated with his four sons, his minister Sumantra and his chief priest Vasistha. Yudhajit, Queen Kaikeyi In his sons Bharata and Shatrughna Perform Funeral Rites (detail) On the right, Rama leaves Dasaratha Rama and Lakshmana Bound, from the On the Right, Dasaratha Again Tells Rama He Will Make Him King, with Vasistha, Laksmana, Another Brahmin and Ministers in Attendance. Rama and Laksmana Then Leave the King to Call on Kausalya on the Left, Who, Dressed in White, is Wor Dasaratha Had Previously Ordered Sumantra to Summon His Queens and All His Wives, Who Now Surround the King When Sumantra Brings the Exiles in to Make Their Farewells. Dasaratha Tries to Persuade Rama Not to Go to the Forest Despite the entreaties of his brother to return to rule Ayodhya, Rama remains adamant in adhering to his father On the right in the palace, the princes ask the king for teachers of religion, arts and sciences, while above two ladies at a carpeted jharokha window look down on them on the left as they practise horsemanship on the exercise ground The four messengers on horseback approach the city of Kekaya, while attendants try to wake Bharata, who has had alarming dreams about his father. In one of them, shown below, the king dressed plainly, and seated on an iron (here blue) The princes in their chariot drive through the main street at Ayodhya, wondering at the change in the city since they left it, and then enter the palace, with questioning gestures. In an upper room, a Brahmin and three ministers converse. Bharadvaja, seated outside his hut with other ascetics and deer, enquires of the princes whether they have enjoyed his hospitality. He tells them and their companions that Rama is living in Citrakuta. At his request, the princes introduce themselves. Rama, his wife and brother ride off in a chariot driven by Sumantra and are surrounded by the grieving townspeople, whose tears lay the dust raised by the chariot The king is helped back into his palace by his queens. He repudiates Kaikeyi, telling her to dwell in the palace as a widow as he does not want to see her again, and is helped to bed by Kausalya and Sumitra, while the lesser queens m Through his magic powers, Bharadvaja has conjured up a palace in a pleasure ground for the entertainment and refreshment of his guests. Bharadvaja and the other ascetics and Brahmins sit in the throne-room, while the two princes fir Having finally persuaded his mother and brother to calmly accept his fate, Rama and Laksmana return to his own palace in the chariot, Rama The chariots of Vasistha and the princes, attended by various ministers and people, enter the town of Nandigrama The messengers, in an upper chamber, tell the princes to return to Ayodhya. Below in the throne-room, dressed for the journey, the princes say their farewells to King Kaikeyi and his son Yudhajit On the Left, Sumantra Returns to Ayodhya and Enters the Palace to Give Rama Sumantra arrives in a chariot at Rama Rama has not been able to dissuade Sita or Laksmana from accompanying him, and the three now give away all they possess. Seated in a pavilion on the left, Sita distributes her jewels and clothes to the townspeople, while the Brahmin Su Three chariots convey the king, his son and the two young princes through a bazaar. The fronts of the far shops are visible with merchants selling cloth, and the backs of the ones below. In his palace on the right, the elderly king, usi The princes go off to meet their other mothers in their zenana, but Kausalya and Sumitra, dressed in mourning saris of red and yellow, having heard of their return, have already set off to meet them. Kausalya reproaches Bharata for Bards, musicians and dancers arrive in the morning at the door of the king
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