Sītā and Rāma spend fourteen years in exile.
Verses 68 to 72 once describe Sītā's beauty, charm and glory.
Sītā's devotion
and love for Rāma is described in verses 73 to 76.
Sītā bows down to the Guru of her father and Aṣṭāvakra blesses her.
Verse 55 describes Sītā with her three sisters(Māṇḍavī, Ūrmilā, and Śrutikīrti) and eight companions.
Sītā and Rāma see each other for the first time
when they come face-to-face in the garden.
The next five cantos describe the incarnation of Rāma and his consort Sītā, and their child sports Līlā.
In verses 101 and 102, both Sītā and Rāma leave the garden for the temple and Viśvāmitra's place respectively.
The maidens of Mithilā, friends of Sītā, see the two princes and sing of their
charm in verses 66 to 71.
After the marriage of Sītā and Rāma in Mithilā,
Arundhatī meets Sītā for the first time when the newly-wed couple arrives in Ayodhyā.
In verses 6 to 9, the sage Nārada visits Sītā in Mithilā and carries a message from her to Rāma in Ayodhyā.
Rāma slays Rāvaṇa for abducting Sītā, returns to the throne of Ayodhyā with Sugrīva and Hanumān,
and is again bowed to by Paraśurāma.
Then Prince Bharata thought:"My brother Prince Lakkhaṇa,
and my sister the Lady Sītā, cannot restrain their grief to hear of our father's death;
He tells Lakṣmaṇa that Sītā must be his wife in future, for even
in his dreams his mind never longs for the wife of another.
Paraśurāma tells Janaka that he will arrive again in Mithilā,
pretending to be angry, so that he can have an excuse of seeing both Sītā and Rāma.
Paraśurāma ends the praise by pleading for his protection, wishing that Sītā and Rāma forever reside in his mind,
and acknowledging his lack of knowledge and the omniscience of Rāma.
Not far away he caused camp to be pitched, and then with a few courtiers he visited the hermitage,
at the time when Lakkhaṇa-paṇḍita and Sītā were away in the woods.
In verses 104 to 108, the marriage of the four Raghu princes- Rāma, Lakṣmaṇa, Bharata and Śatrughna-
takes place with the four princesses- Sītā, Ūrmilā, Māṇḍavī and Śrutikīrti respectively;
and the couples come home to Ayodhyā.
Although there is no formal division in the epic, the poet indicates that the epic consists of a first part of nine cantos describing the nine qualities of Paraśurāma, and a second part of 12 cantos in which the brave and noble(Dhīrodātta)
protagonist of the epic Rāma is presented with Sītā being the lead female character.