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Ch. 2: A Pearl of Legend

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A PEARL OF LEGEND
wisely and well. He encouraged his subjects to cultivate the land, to fish the waters, and to trade with those who came by ship and overĀ­land bringing all manner of things for barter.
Though he and his people were devout believers in the Veda, yet did he tolerate the faith of others, and considered the low-born, for Brahmanism had not yet established the extremes of caste which came later. He himself was a Kshattriya but he ruled the Brahmans and would not permit injustice to the Sudras, therefore was he as a god among his people.
And this prince was good to look upon. Tall and straight as a tree of the forest, the fine lines of his grave impassive face were made alive by the light of eyes keen as an eagle's, inscrutable as those of a lion when he looks beyond.
One son only had he, for the others had all fallen in battle. The son was like the sire, and the father's heart was knit to him as steel when it is welded.
Now the time came when it was good that the young prince should marry, for he was man-grown and had been invested with the
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