VAN
PARV MAHABHARAT BOOK 3 CHAPTER 174
Mahabharat
Book 3 Chapter 174 : English
SECTION CLXXVI
Describes
Pandavs journey in twelfth year of their sojourn in forests having
arrived reach Saraswati River
Vaisampayan
said, "When they had left their happy home in the beautiful
mountain abounding in cascades, and having birds, and the elephants
of the eight quarters, and the supernatural attendants of Kuvera
(as dwellers thereof), all happiness forsook those foremost of men
of Bharat's race. But afterwards on beholding Kuvera's favourite
mountain, Kailash, appearing like clouds, the delight of those pre-eminent
heroes of the race of Bharata, became very great. And those foremost
of heroic men, equipped with scimitars and bows, proceeded contentedly,
beholding elevations and defiles, and dens of lions and craggy causeways
and innumerable water-falls and lowlands, in different places, as
also other great forests inhabited by countless deer and birds and
elephants. And they came upon beautiful woodlands and rivers and
lakes and caves and mountain caverns; and these frequently by day
and night became the dwelling place of those great men. And having
dwelt in all sorts of inaccessible places and crossing Kailasa of
inconceivable grandeur, they reached the excellent and surpassingly
beautiful hermitage of Vrishaparba.
And
meeting king Vrishaparba and received by him being they became free
from depression and then they accurately narrated in detail to Vrishaparba
the story of their sojourn in the mountains. And having pleasantly
passed one night in his sacred abode frequented by gods and Maharshis,
those great warriors proceeded smoothly towards the jujube tree
called Visala and took up their quarters there. Then all those magnanimous
men having reached the place of Narayana, continued to live there,
bereft of all sorrow, at beholding Kuvera's favourite lake, frequented
by gods and Siddhas. And viewing that lake, those foremost of men,
the sons of Pandu traversed that place, renouncing all grief even
as immaculate Brahmana rishis (do) on attaining a habitation in
the Nandana gardens. Then all those warriors having in due course
happily lived at Badari for one month, proceeded towards the realm
of Suvahu, king of the Kirats, by following the same track by which
they had come. And crossing the difficult Himalayan regions, and
the countries of China, Tukhara, Darada, Darva and all the climes
of Kulinda, rich in heaps of jewels, those warlike men reached the
capital of Suvahu. And hearing that those sons and grandsons of
kings had all reached his kingdom, Suvahu, elated with joy, advanced
(to meet them). Then the best of the Kurus welcomed him also. And
meeting king Suvahu, and being joined by all their charioteers with
Visoka at their head and by their attendants, Indrasena and others,
and also by the superintendents and servants of the kitchen, they
stayed there comfortably for one night. Then taking all the chariots
and chariot-men and
p.
355
dismissing
Ghatotkach together with his followers, they next repaired to the
monarch of mountains in the vicinity of the Yamuna. In the midst
of the mountain abounding in waterfalls and having grey and orange-coloured
slopes and summits covered with a sheet of snow, those warlike men
having then found the great forest of Visakhayupa like unto the
forest of Chitraratha and inhabited by wild boars and various kinds
of deer and birds, made it their home. Addicted to hunting as their
chief occupation, the sons of Pritha peacefully dwelt in that forest
for one year. There in a cavern of the mountain, Vrikodara, with
a heart afflicted with distraction and grief, came across a snake
of huge strength distressed with hunger and looking fierce like
death itself. At this crisis Yudhishthira, the best of pious men,
became the protector of Vrikodara and he, of infinite puissance,
extricated Bhima whose whole body had been fast gripped by the snake
with its folds. And the twelfth year of their sojourn in forests
having arrived, those scions of the race of Kuru, blazing in effulgence,
and engaged in asceticism, always devoted principally to the practice
of archery, repaired cheerfully from that Chitraratha-like forest
to the borders of the desert, and desirous of dwelling by the Saraswati
they went there, and from the banks of that river they reached the
lake of Dwaitabana.
Then
seeing them enter Dwaitavana, the dwellers of that place engaged
in asceticism, religious ordinances, and self-restraining exercises
and in deep and devout meditation and subsisting on things ground
with stone (for want of teeth) having procured grass-mats and water-vessels,
advanced to meet them. The holy fig, the rudaraksh, the rohitaka,
the cane and the jujube, the catechu, the sirisha, the bel and the
inguda and the karira and pilu and sami trees grew on the banks
of the Saraswati. Wandering about with contentment in (the vicinity
of) the Saraswati which was, as it were, the home of the celestials,
and the favourite (resort) of Yakshas and Gandharvas and Maharshis,
those sons of kings lived there in happiness."
Source
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