Chapter 78: Military Pride
Kural 771
Dare you not, my enemies, to stand against my monarch!
Many who did now stand as stone monuments.
Kural 772
It is more gratifying to carry a lance that missed an elephant
than to hold an arrow that hit a thicket-dwelling rabbit.
Kural 773
Intrepid courage is what they call valor,
and clemency toward the defeated is its sharp edge.
Kural 774
Having hurled his spear at a battlefield elephant,
the hero found another piercing his side and grasped it with glee.
Kural 775
Is it not a disgraceful defeat to the courageous warrior
if his defiant eyes so much as blink when a lance is hurled at him?
Kural 776
When recounting his days, the heroic soldier regards all those
on which no battle scars were sustained as squandered.
Kural 777
To fasten the warrior's anklet on one who desires glory
more than life is to decorate heroism with distinction.
Kural 778
Men of courage who do not fear for their lives in battle do not
forfeit soldierly ardor, even if the king prohibits their fighting.
Kural 779
Who would dare deride as defeated
men who die fulfilling valor's vow?
Kural 780
Heroic death that fills the sovereign's eyes with tears
is worth begging for and then dying for.