sītā in A Sentence

    1

    Sītā and Rāma spend fourteen years in exile.

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    2

    Verses 68 to 72 once describe Sītā's beauty, charm and glory.

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    3

    Sītā's devotion and love for Rāma is described in verses 73 to 76.

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    4

    Sītā bows down to the Guru of her father and Aṣṭāvakra blesses her.

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    5

    Verse 55 describes Sītā with her three sisters(Māṇḍavī, Ūrmilā, and Śrutikīrti) and eight companions.

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    6

    Sītā and Rāma see each other for the first time when they come face-to-face in the garden.

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    7

    The next five cantos describe the incarnation of Rāma and his consort Sītā, and their child sports Līlā.

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    8

    In verses 101 and 102, both Sītā and Rāma leave the garden for the temple and Viśvāmitra's place respectively.

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    9

    The maidens of Mithilā, friends of Sītā, see the two princes and sing of their charm in verses 66 to 71.

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    10

    After the marriage of Sītā and Rāma in Mithilā, Arundhatī meets Sītā for the first time when the newly-wed couple arrives in Ayodhyā.

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    11

    In verses 6 to 9, the sage Nārada visits Sītā in Mithilā and carries a message from her to Rāma in Ayodhyā.

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    12

    Rāma slays Rāvaṇa for abducting Sītā, returns to the throne of Ayodhyā with Sugrīva and Hanumān, and is again bowed to by Paraśurāma.

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    13

    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;

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    14

    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.

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    15

    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.

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    16

    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.

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    17

    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.

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    18

    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.

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    19

    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.

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