Shagongdaro was adapted from the epics Mahabharata and Lotus Story Book, but Kalidatu enriched the flesh and blood of the characters and the content of the story with his own artistic creation. The basic plot is as follows:
King Dou Fantuo went hunting in the suburbs. In order to chase a deer, he broke into the Jingxiu forest, where he met a young girl, Sha Gongdaruo, and they fell in love at first sight.
From then on, the girl's heart was full of love. One day, she told her girlfriend in the forest that she was just caught by Doufantuo. He came out of his hiding place excitedly and boldly expressed his sincere love to her. They got married in their own way. However, after marriage, Dou Fantuo had to return to Beijing. Before he left, he gave a ring engraved with his name as a token to Shagongdaruo.
After leaving his lover, Sagondaro became lovesick. With a heavy heart, she neglected a fairy and was cursed. Although Sha Gongda was attached to the flowers and trees in the forest, he decided to leave here and set foot on the road to Beijing to find her husband. Because the fairy was in the way, she lost her ring as a token.
After some efforts, Shagongda met King Dou Fantuo. However, at this time, the king had already fallen into the harem surrounded by beautiful women and completely forgot his former lover. Shagongdaro was fascinated, but she got the king's indifference. For this reason, she wept for the land and was in great pain. Her biological mother Minerva brought her daughter back to heaven. From then on, she lived a life of quietism in heaven and raised her son born with Dou Fantuo.
One day, a fisherman got a ring engraved with the king's name from the fish's stomach, and he was taken to the king Dou Fantuo. Seeing things and thinking about people, Dou Fantuo immediately resumed his love for Sha Gongda Ruo. He regrets his fickle feelings and misses his former lover. However. Where are the Sagondaro people, but it's hard to find them. Since then, in the king's eyes, the bright spring scenery is no longer beautiful, and the luxurious life is dull.
Later, at the behest of the gods, King Dou Fantuo went to heaven to destroy the devil. When he returned home in triumph, he found the ascetic forest in the sky and was attracted by the beautiful scenery. He walked slowly and patrolled. Suddenly, a king-like child came to him. It turns out that this is his own son. The king found Shagongdaruo and apologized to her. Although Sha Gongda has experienced a lot of sadness, her love for her husband has never changed. So they returned to Beijing together for the second time and enjoyed a happy life.
In the plot of Sha Gong Da Ruo, although it still shows the love between the immortal and the mortal, it reveals the deep sigh of emotional encounter in real life. As a court poet, Kalidatha may have witnessed many young women's grievances and love robberies. In the patriarchal social environment and the well-defined harem life, one girl after another can only let fate play tricks on her, endure to watch out of the water, lament that the truth is hard to survive and lament that youth is fleeting. Kalidatu used his poetic pen to write a heart song for such a figure. He dared not criticize the promiscuous king; But for those sad women who are suffering, his heart is full of pity; To this end, he skillfully used the immortal curse to give a reasonable reason for King Dou Fantuo's unrequited love, so that Sagondaro's suffering was finally replaced by happiness.
In Sakyamuni, the author shows the loveliness and beauty of many women. She is born beautiful, pure and kind, full of passion for life and full of youthful vitality. When she was in "Seeds of Love", she wrote a poem on the lotus leaf: "I can't guess your heart, but cruel man, love burns my limbs violently day and night, and I only have you in my heart." When she met the right person, she was shy but pursued love without hesitation. When Dou Fantuo refused to admit her, she refused to accept the reality and was helpless. Instead, he angrily denounced the bean fans as despicable and solemnly warned the king that the end of the liar would be "extinction." Kalidatu depicts a woman who is full of flesh and blood, sentient beings and righteousness, and her personality is distinct and lifelike.