ADI
PARV MAHABHARAT BOOK 1 CHAPTER 109
Adi
Parv, Mahabharat / Mahabharat Book I Chapter 109 : English
SECTION
CIX
(Sambhav Parv continued)
"Vaisampayan said, 'Upon the birth of those three children,
Kurujangala, Kurukshetra, and the Kurus grew in prosperity. The
earth began to yield abundant harvest, and the crops also were of
good flavour. And the clouds began to pour rain in season and trees
became full of fruits and flowers. And the draught cattle were all
happy and the birds and other animals rejoiced exceedingly. And
the flowers became fragrant and the fruits became sweet; the cities
and towns became filled with merchants, artisans, traders and artists
of every description. And the people became brave, learned, honest
and happy. And there were no robbers then, nor anybody who was sinful.
And it seemed that the golden age had come upon every part of the
kingdom. And the people devoted to virtuous acts, sacrifices and
truth, and regarding one another with love and affection grew in
prosperity. And free from pride, wrath and covetousness, they rejoiced
in perfectly innocent sports. And the capital of the Kurus, full
as the ocean, was a second Amaravati, teeming with hundreds of palaces
and mansions, and possessing gates and arches dark as the clouds.
And men in great cheerfulness sported constantly on rivers, lakes
and tanks, and in fine groves and charming woods. And the southern
Kurus, in their virtuous rivalry with their northern kinsmen, walked
about in the company of Siddhas and Charanas and Rishis. And all
over that delightful country whose prosperity was thus increased
by the Kurus, there were no misers and no widowed women. And the
wells and lakes were ever full; the groves abounded with trees,
and the houses and abodes of Brahmanas were full of wealth and the
whole kingdom was full of festivities. And, O king, virtuously ruled
by Bhishma, the kingdom was adorned with hundreds of sacrificial
stakes. And the wheel of virtue having been set in motion by Bhishma,
and the country became so contented that the subjects of other kingdoms,
quitting their homes, came to dwell there and increase its population.
And the citizens and the people were filled with hope, upon seeing
the youthful acts of their illustrious princes. And, O king, in
the house of the Kuru chiefs as also of the principal citizens,
'give',
p.
234
[paragraph
continues] 'eat' were the only words constantly heard. And Dhritarashtra
and Pandu and Vidura of great intelligence were from their birth
brought up by Bhishma, as if they were his own sons. And the children,
having passed through the usual rites of their order, devoted themselves
to vows and study. And they grew up into fine young men skilled
in the Vedas and all athletic sports. And they became well-skilled
in the practice of bow, in horsemanship, in encounters with mace,
sword and shield, in the management of elephants in battle, and
in the science of morality. Well-read in history and the Puranas
and various branches of learning, and acquainted with the truths
of the Vedas and their branches they acquired knowledge, which was
versatile and deep. And Pandu, possessed of great prowess, excelled
all men in archery while Dhritarashtra excelled all in personal
strength, while in the three worlds there was no one equal to Vidura
in devotion to virtue and in the knowledge of the dictates of morality.
And beholding the restoration of the extinct line of Santanu, the
saying became current in all countries that among mothers of heroes,
the daughters of the king of Kasi were the first; that among countries
Kurujangala was the first; that among virtuous men, Vidura was the
first; that among cities Hastinapura was the first. Pandu became
king, for Dhritarashtra, owing to the blindness, and Vidura, for
his birth by a Sudra woman, did not obtain the kingdom. One day
Bhishma, the foremost of those acquainted with the duties of a statesman
and dictates of morality, properly addressing Vidura conversant
with the truth of religion and virtue, said as follows."
Source
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