SECTION 10
"Narada said,--'Possessed of great
splendour, the assembly house of Vaisravana, O king, is a hundred yojanas in
length and seventy yojanas in breadth. It was built by Vaisravana himself using
his ascetic power. Possessing the splendour of the peaks of Kailasa, that
mansion eclipses by its own the brilliance of the Moon himself. Supported by Guhyakas,
that mansion seems to be attached to the firmament. Of celestial make, it is
rendered extremely handsome with high chambers of gold. Extremely delightful
and rendered fragrant with celestial perfumes, it is variegated with numberless
costly jewels. Resembling the peaks of a mass of white clouds, it seems to be
floating in the air. Painted with colours of celestial gold, it seems to be
decked with streaks of lightning. Within that mansion sitteth on an excellent
seat bright as the sun and covered with celestial carpets and furnished with a
handsome footstool, king Vaisravana of agreeable person, attired in excellent robes
and adorned with costly ornaments and ear-rings of great brilliance, surrounded
by his thousand wives. Delicious and cooling breezes murmuring through forests
of tall Mandaras, and bearing fragrance of extensive plantations of jasmine, as
also of the lotuses on the bosom of the river Alaka and of the Nandana-gardens,
always minister to the pleasure of the King of the Yakshas. There the deities
with the Gandharvas surrounded by various tribes of Apsaras, sing in chorus, O king,
notes of celestial sweetness. Misrakesi and Rambha, and Chitrasena, and
Suchismita; and Charunetra, and Gritachi and Menaka, and Punjikasthala; and
Viswachi Sahajanya, and Pramlocha and Urvasi and Ira, and Varga and Sauraveyi,
and Samichi, and Vududa, and Lata--these and a thousand other Apsaras and
Gandharvas, all well-skilled in music and dance, attend upon Kubera, the lord
of treasures. And that mansion, always filled with the notes of instrumental
and vocal music, as also with the sounds of dance of various tribes of
Gandharvas, and Apsaras hath become extremely charming and delicious. The
Gandharvas called Kinnaras, and others called Naras, and Manibhadra, and
Dhanada, and Swetabhadra and Guhyaka; Kaseraka, Gandakandu, and the mighty
Pradyota; Kustumburu, Pisacha, Gajakarna, and Visalaka, Varaha-Karna,
Tamraushtica, Falkaksha, and Falodaka; Hansachuda, Sikhavarta, Vibhishana,
Pushpanana, Pingalaka, Sonitoda and Pravalaka; Vrikshavaspa-niketa, and Chiravasas--these
and many other Yakshas by hundreds and thousands always wait upon Kubera. The
goddess Lakshmi always stayeth there, also Kubera's son NalaKubera. Myself and
many others like myself often repair thither. Many Brahmana Rishis and
celestial Rishis also repair there often. Many Rakshasas, and many Gandharvas,
besides those that have been named, wait upon the worship, in that mansion, Kubera.
And, Siva, the three-eyed Mahadeva, the wielder of the trident and called Bhaga-netra,
surrounded by multitudes of spirits in their hundreds and thousands, some of
dwarfish stature, some of fierce visage, some hunch-backed, some of blood-red
eyes, some of frightful yells, some feeding upon fat and flesh, and some
terrible to behold, but all armed with various weapons and endued with the
speed of wind, with the goddess Parvati ever cheerful and knowing no fatigue, always
waiteth here upon their friend Kubera. And hundreds of Gandharva chiefs, with
cheerful hearts and attired in their respective robes and Viswavasu, and Haha
and Huhu; and Tumburu and Parvatta, and Sailusha; and Chitrasena skilled in
music and also Chitraratha,--these and innumerable Gandharvas worship Kubera.
And Chakradhaman, the chief of the Vidyadharas, with his followers, waiteth in
that mansion upon the lord of treasures. And Kinnaras by hundreds and
innumerable kings with Bhagadatta as their chief, and Druma, the chief of the
Kimpurushas, and Mahendra, the chief of the Rakshasas, and Gandhamadana
accompanied by many Yakshas and Gandharvas and many Rakshasas wait upon the
lord of treasures. The virtuous Vibhishana also worshippeth there his elder
brother the lord Kubera. The mountains of Himavat, Paripatra, Vindhya, Kailasa,
Mandara, Malaya, Durdura, Mahendra, Gandhamadana, Indrakila, Sunava, and Eastern
and the Western hills--these and many other mountains, in their personified
forms, with Meru standing before all, wait upon and worship Kubera. The
illustrious Nandiswaras, and Mahakala, and many spirits with arrowy ears and
sharp-pointed mouths, Kaksha, Kuthimukha, Danti, and Vijaya of great ascetic
merit, and the mighty white bull of Siva roaring deep, all wait in that
mansion. Besides these many other Rakshasas and Pisachas (devils) worship Kubera
in that assembly house. The son of Pulastya (Kubera) formerly used always to worship
in all the modes and sit, with permission obtained, beside the god of gods,
Siva, the creator of the three worlds, that supreme Deity surrounded by his
attendants. One day Siva made friendship with Kubera. From that time, O king,
Mahadeva always sitteth on the mansion of his friend, the lord of treasures.
Those best of all jewels, those princes of all gems in the three worlds- Sankha
and Padma, in their personified forms, accompanied by all the jewels of the earth
also in their personified forms worship Kubera."
"This delightful assembly house of Kubera
that I have seen, attached to the firmament and capable of moving along it, is
such, O king. Listen now to the Sabha I describe unto thee, belonging to Brahma
the Grandsire."
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