the dejection of Drupada on learning that Draupadi
was to be wedded to five husbands; the wonderful story
of the five Indras related in consequence; the extraordinary
and divinely-ordained wedding of Draupadi; the sending
of Vidura by the sons of Dhritarashtra as envoy to
the Pandavas; the arrival of Vidura and his sight
to Krishna; the abode of the Pandavas in Khandava-prastha,
and then their rule over one half of the kingdom;
the fixing of turns by the sons of Pandu, in obedience
to the injunction of Narada, for connubial companionship
with Krishna. In like manner hath the history
of Sunda and Upasunda been recited in this. This
parva then treats of the departure of Arjuna for the
forest according to the vow, he having seen Draupadi
and Yudhishthira sitting together as he entered the
chamber to take out arms for delivering the kine of
a certain Brahmana. This parva then describes
Arjuna’s meeting on the way with Ulupi, the daughter
of a Naga (serpent); it then relates his visits to
several sacred spots; the birth of Vabhruvahana; the
deliverance by Arjuna of the five celestial damsels
who had been turned into alligators by the imprecation
of a Brahmana, the meeting of Madhava and Arjuna on
the holy spot called Prabhasa; the carrying away of
Subhadra by Arjuna, incited thereto by her brother
Krishna, in the wonderful car moving on land and water,
and through mid-air, according to the wish of the
rider; the departure for Indraprastha, with the dower;
the conception in the womb of Subhadra of that prodigy
of prowess, Abhimanyu; Yajnaseni’s giving birth
to children; then follows the pleasure-trip of Krishna
and Arjuna to the banks of the Jamuna and the acquisition
by them of the discus and the celebrated bow Gandiva;
the burning of the forest of Khandava; the rescue of
Maya by Arjuna, and the escape of the serpent,—and
the begetting of a son by that best of Rishis, Mandapala,
in the womb of the bird Sarngi. This parva is
divided by Vyasa into two hundred and twenty-seven
chapters. These two hundred and twenty-seven
chapters contain eight thousand eight hundred and
eighty-four slokas.
The second is the extensive parva called Sabha or
the assembly, full of matter. The subjects of
this parva are the establishment of the grand hall
by the Pandavas; their review of their retainers; the
description of the lokapalas by Narada well-acquainted
with the celestial regions; the preparations for the
Rajasuya sacrifice; the destruction of Jarasandha;
the deliverance by Vasudeva of the princes confined
in the mountain-pass; the campaign of universal conquest
by the Pandavas; the arrival of the princes at the
Rajasuya sacrifice with tribute; the destruction of
Sisupala on the occasion of the sacrifice, in connection
with offering of arghya; Bhimasena’s ridicule
of Duryodhana in the assembly; Duryodhana’s
sorrow and envy at the sight of the magnificent scale
on which the arrangements had been made; the indignation
of Duryodhana in consequence, and the preparations