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Text 12

lokaṁ pradarśaya suhṛttama tāvakaṁ me
yatratya ittham urasāvayavāv apūrvau
asmad-vidhasya mana-unnayanau bibharti
bahv adbhutaṁ sarasa-rāsa-sudhādi vaktre

lokam — residential place; pradarśaya — please show; suhṛt-tama — O best of friends; tāvakam — your; me — unto me; yatratyaḥ — a person born wherein; ittham — like this; urasā — by the chest; avayavau — two limbs (breasts); apūrvau — wonderful; asmat-vidhasya — of a person like me; manaḥ-unnayanau — very agitating to the mind; bibharti — sustains; bahu — many; adbhutam — wonderful; sarasa — sweet words; rāsa — amorous gestures like smiling; sudhā-ādi — such as nectar; vaktre — in the mouth.

O best friend, will you kindly show me the place where you reside? I cannot imagine how the residents of that place have gotten such wonderful bodily features as your raised breasts, which agitate the mind and eyes of a person like me who sees them. Judging by the sweet speech and kind smiles of those residents, I think that their mouths must contain nectar.

Still bewildered, Āgnīdhra wanted to see the place from which the brāhmaṇa boy had come, where the men had such raised breasts. Such attractive features, he thought, must be due to the severe austerities performed there. Āgnīdhra addressed the girl as suhṛttama, the best friend, so that she would not refuse to take him there. Not only was Āgnīdhra captivated by the girl’s raised breasts; he was also attracted by her sweet speech. Nectar seemed to emanate from her mouth, and therefore he was increasingly surprised.

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