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The Dawn and the Day - Or, The Buddha and the Christ, Part I by Henry Thayer Niles
page 20 of 172 (11%)
While they sit lost in wonder, as one sits
Who never saw a telephone, but hears
Unanswered questions, laughter at unheard jests,
And sees one bid a little box good-by.
And when they came before the king, they saw,
Laughing and cooing on its mother's knee,
Picture of innocence, a sweet young child;
He saw a mighty prophet, and bowed down
Eight times in reverence to the very ground,
And rising said, "Thrice happy house, all hail!
This child would rule the world, if he would rule,
But he, too good to rule, is born to save;
But Maya's work is done, the devas wait."
But when they sought for him, the sage was gone,
Whence come or whither gone none ever knew.
Then gentle Maya understood her dream.
The music nearer, clearer sounds; she sleeps.
But when the funeral pile was raised for her,
Of aloe, sandal, and all fragrant woods,
And decked with flowers and rich with rare perfumes,
And when the queen was gently laid thereon,
As in sweet sleep, and the pile set aflame,
The king cried out in anguish; when the sage
Again appeared, and gently said, "Weep not!
Seek not, O king, the living with the dead!
'Tis but her cast-off garment, not herself,
That now dissolves in air. Thy loved one lives,
Become thy deva,[9] who was erst thy queen."
This said, he vanished, and was no more seen.

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