Dhananjaya’s departure. The princess of
Panchala in particular, remembering her third lord,
addressed the anxious Yudhishthira and said, ’That
Arjuna who with two hands rivals the thousand-armed
Arjuna (of old), alas, without that foremost of the
sons of Pandu, this forest doth not seem at all beautiful
in my eyes. Without him, whenever I cast my eyes,
this earth seems to be forlorn. Even this forest
with its blossoming trees and so full of wonders,
without Arjuna seems not so delightful as before.
Without him who is like a mass of blue clouds (in hue),
who hath the prowess of an infuriated elephant, and
whose eyes are like the leaves of the lotus, this
Kamyaka forest doth not seem beautiful to me.
Remembering that hero capable of drawing the bow with
his left hand, and the twang of whose bow sounds like
the roar of thunder, I cannot feel any happiness,
O king!’ And, O monarch, hearing her lament in
this strain, that slayer of hostile heroes, Bhimasena,
addressed Draupadi in these words, ’O blessed
lady of slender waist, the agreeable words thou utterest
delight my heart like the quaffing of nectar.
Without him whose arms are long and symmetrical, and
stout and like unto a couple of iron maces and round
and marked by the scars of the bow-strings and graced
with the bow and sword and other weapons and encircled
with golden bracelets and like unto a couple of five-headed
snakes, without that tiger among men the sky itself
seemeth to be without the sun. Without that mighty-armed
one relying upon whom the Panchalas and the Kauravas
fear not the sternly-exerting ranks of the celestials
themselves, without that illustrious hero relying
upon whose arms we all regard our foes as already
vanquished and the earth itself as already conquered,
without that Phalguna I cannot obtain any peace in
the woods of Kamyaka. The different directions
also, wherever I cast my eyes, appear to be empty!’
“After Bhima had concluded, Nakula the son of
Pandu, with voice choked with tears, said, ’Without
him whose extraordinary deeds on the field of battle
constitute the talk of even the gods, without that
foremost of warriors, what pleasure can we have in
the woods? Without him who having gone towards
the north had vanquished mighty Gandharva chiefs by
hundreds, and who having obtained numberless handsome
horses of the Tittiri and Kalmasha species all endowed
with the speed of the wind, presented them from affection
unto his brother the king, on the occasion of the
great Rajasuya sacrifice, without that dear and illustrious
one, without that terrible warrior born after Bhima,
without that hero equal unto a god I do not desire
to live in the Kamyaka woods any longer.’
“After Nakula’s lamentations, Sahadeva
said, ’He who having vanquished mighty warriors
in battle won wealth and virgins and brought them unto
the king on the occasion of the great Rajasuya
sacrifice, that hero of immeasurable splendour who
having vanquished single-handed the assembled Yadavas
in battle, ravished Subhadra with the consent of Vasudeva,
he, who having invaded the dominion of the illustrious
Drupada gave, O Bharata, unto the preceptor Drona
his tuition fee—beholding, O king, that
Jishnu’s bed of grass empty in our asylum, my
heart refuses consolation. A migration from this
forest is what, O represser of foes, I would prefer
for without that hero this forest cannot be delightful.’”