Introduction
King
David (1005 – 965 BC) sent his army to wage war against the Ammonities, a tribe
from a region east of the Dead Sea and he stayed behind in Jerusalem for wooing Bathsheeba. Against the
backdrop of the war, the following scene takes place.
Bathsheeba,
my dear mirror,
Don’t
singe the heart with thy sunny locks
Call
the moon to caress the burnt soul
Oh,
‘no’ to the magic in thy lips
Is
it fair to hypnotise with thy look?
See,
how I float in water very light
Hark!
Flying high like a lark
It
‘s ‘maya’, they say
To
catch a fish with a hook
No
more rage or bitterness
When
will thou shed thy skin?
And
let me see thy colour
A
trance, in deed, that nothing can penetrate
Why
do thou cast a glance at?
See,
how the lips lost control and sing
A
war, a war, a war
Come
hither to wage a war!
In
my heart with thy eyes
Neither
a king nor a husband
A
friend to call thee
A
mural on the wall
Or
a sculpture on the mall
An
everlasting symbol
To
live long in the hearts
Of all in the annals
of history