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romance
By Elizabeth Stein for Mythos Atlas. About the author. Editorial notes are grounded in the site's cited sources and can be challenged through the contact page.
King Dushyanta of the Puru dynasty was hunting in the forest when he came upon the hermitage of the sage Kanva. There he saw Shakuntala, foster daughter of the sage, raised in the wilderness among deer and flowers. She was the secret child of the sage Vishwamitra and the apsara Menaka, abandoned in the forest and raised by Kanva.
Their eyes met, and love kindled instantly. Dushyanta remained at the hermitage, and they were married by the gandharva rite—a simple exchange of vows requiring no priest or ceremony, valid but informal. When the king returned to his duties, he left Shakuntala with a royal signet ring as proof of their union.
Shakuntala was lost in thoughts of her absent husband when the irascible sage Durvasa arrived at the hermitage seeking hospitality. So deep in reverie was she that she failed to notice him, and he cursed her in fury: "He whom you think of shall forget you entirely!"
Too late, her companions begged for mercy. Durvasa relented slightly: when Shakuntala showed the king some token of their love, his memory would return. But the ring Dushyanta had given her slipped from her finger as she bathed in a sacred pool.
Without the ring, without any proof, Shakuntala carried their child toward a kingdom that had forgotten her entirely.
Months later, Shakuntala journeyed to the capital, pregnant with the king's son. But when she stood before Dushyanta in his great hall, he looked at her with no recognition. She was a stranger. He accused her of fabricating a story to trap him, of attempting to pass off another man's child as his.
Shakuntala pleaded, reminded him of their time together, but the curse was absolute. Humiliated and heartbroken, she was about to be expelled from the court when her mother Menaka descended from heaven and carried her away to the hermitage of another great sage.
A fisherman caught a great fish in the river and found within its belly a royal signet ring. He brought it to the palace, where Dushyanta instantly recognized it. As his fingers touched the ring, the curse broke, and all his memories returned in a flood.
Overwhelmed with remorse, the king realized the terrible wrong he had done. He had rejected his true wife, dishonored her before the court, and lost her forever. He fell into despair so deep that he neglected his kingdom.
Years passed. The gods recruited Dushyanta to help fight a war against the demons, and after his victory, he was allowed to visit the celestial realms. There, in Indra's paradise, he found a boy wrestling with lion cubs and treating them like pets.
"Whose child is this?" he asked.
"He is the son of Dushyanta by Shakuntala," answered the attendants.
The boy was Bharata, whose name would one day be given to all of India (Bharatavarsha). Shakuntala emerged, still in ascetic's robes, but she forgave Dushyanta when she learned the truth of the curse. Together, they returned to his kingdom, where Bharata would become one of history's greatest kings.
Shakuntala's story teaches that love survives even when memory fails. The curse was powerful enough to erase a king's mind, but it could not destroy what was true. The ring served merely to restore what had always existed. Even forgotten, love leaves its marks—in children, in the ache of something missing, in the recognition that rises when we see again what we had lost.
Dushyanta and Shakuntala marry by gandharva rite. Durvasa's curse makes the king forget. The ring is lost. Shakuntala is rejected. The ring is found in a fish. Dushyanta rediscovers his wife and son Bharata.
This story from the Mahabharata was made world-famous by Kalidasa's Sanskrit play 'Abhijnanashakuntalam' (The Recognition of Shakuntala), considered one of the greatest works of Sanskrit literature. Shakuntala became an ideal of feminine patience and fidelity, while the tale explores how memory, tokens, and truth connect across time.
Adi Parva