SECTION 128
(Sambhava Parva continued)
"Vaisampayana said, 'Then Bhishma and Kunti with their
friends celebrated the Sraddha of the deceased monarch, and offered the Pinda.
And they feasted the Kauravas and thousands of Brahmanas unto whom they also
gave gems and lands. Then the citizens returned to Hastinapura with the sons of
Pandu, now that they had been cleansed from the impurity incident to the demise
of their father. All then fell to weeping for the departed king. It seemed as
if they had lost one of their own kin.
"When the Sraddha had been celebrated in the manner mentioned
above, the venerable Vyasa, seeing all the subjects sunk in grief, said one day
to his mother Satyavati, 'Mother, our days of happiness have gone by and days
of calamity have succeeded. Sin beginneth to increase day by day. The world
hath got old. The empire of the Kauravas will no longer endure because of wrong
and oppression. Go thou then into the forest, and devote thyself to
contemplation through Yoga. Henceforth society will be filled with deceit and
wrong. Good work will cease. Do not witness the annihilation of thy race, in
thy old age.'
"Acquiescing in the words of Vyasa, Satyavati entered the
inner apartments and addressed her daughter-in-law, saying, 'O Ambika, I hear that
in consequence of the deeds of your grandsons, this Bharata dynasty and its
subjects will perish. If thou permit, I would go to the forest with Kausalya,
so grieved at the loss of her son.' O king, saying this the queen, taking the
permission of Bhishma also, went to the forest. And arriving there with her two
daughters-in-law, she became engaged in profound contemplation, and in good
time leaving her body ascended to heaven.'
"Vaisampayana continued, 'Then the sons of king Pandu, having
gone through all the purifying rites prescribed in the Vedas, began to grow up in
princely style in the home of their father. Whenever they were engaged in play
with the sons of Dhritarashtra, their superiority of strength became marked. In
speed, in striking the objects aimed at, in consuming articles of food, and
scattering dust, Bhimasena beat all the sons of Dhritarashtra. The son of the
Wind-god pulled them by the hair and made them fight with one another, laughing
all the while. And Vrikodara easily defeated those hundred and one children of
great energy as if they were one instead of being a hundred and one. The second
Pandava used to seize them by the hair, and throwing them down, to drag them
along the earth. By this, some had their knees broken, some their heads, and
some their shoulders. That youth, sometimes holding ten of them, drowned them
in water, till they were nearly dead. When the sons of Dhritarashtra got up to
the boughs of a tree for plucking fruits, Bhima used to shake that tree, by
striking it with his foot, so that down came the fruits and the fruitpluckers
at the same time. In fact, those princes were no match for Bhima in pugilistic
encounters, in speed, or in skill. Bhima used to make a display of his strength
by thus tormenting them in childishness but not from malice.
"Seeing these wonderful exhibitions of the might of Bhima,
the powerful Duryodhana, the eldest son of Dhritarashtra, began to conceive
hostility towards him. And Duryodhana, through ambition, prepared himself for
an act of sin. He thought, 'There is no other individual who can compare with
Bhima, in point of prowess. I shall have to destroy him by artifice. Singly, Bhima
dares a century of us to the combat. Therefore, when he shall sleep in the
garden, I shall throw him into the current of the Ganga. Afterwards, confining
his eldest brother Yudhishthira and his younger brother Arjuna, I shall reign
sole king without molestation.' Determined thus, Duryodhana was ever on the
watch to find out an opportunity for injuring Bhima. And, at length at a
beautiful place called Pramanakoti on the banks of the Ganga, he built a palace
decorated with hangings of broad-cloth and other rich stuffs. And he built this
palace for sporting in the water there, and filled it with all kinds of
entertaining things and choice viands. Gay flags waved on the top of this
mansion. The name of the house was 'the water-sport house.' Skilful cooks
prepared various kinds of viands. When all was ready, the officers gave
intimation to Duryodhana. Then the prince said unto the Pandavas, 'Let us all
go to the banks of the Ganga graced with trees and crowned with flowers and
sport there in the water.' And upon Yudhishthira agreeing to this, the sons of
Dhritarashtra, taking the Pandavas with them, mounted country-born elephants of
great size and cars resembling towns, and left the metropolis.
"On arriving at the place, the princes dismissed their
attendants, and surveying the beauty of the gardens and the groves, entered the
palace, like lions entering their mountain caves. On entering they saw that the
architects had handsomely plastered the walls and the ceilings and that painters
had painted them beautifully. The windows looked very graceful, and the
artificial fountains were splendid. Here and there were tanks of pellucid water
in which bloomed forests of lotuses. The banks were decked with various flowers
whose fragrance filled the atmosphere. The Kauravas and the Pandavas sat down
and began to enjoy the things provided for them. They became engaged in play
and began to exchange morsels of food with one another. Meanwhile Duryodhana
had mixed a powerful poison with a quantity of food, with the object of making
away with Bhima. That youth in a friendly way fed Bhima largely with that poisoned
food, and thinking himself lucky in having compassed his end, was exceedingly
glad at heart. Then the sons of Dhritarashtra and Pandu together became
cheerfully engaged in sporting in the water. Their sport having been finished,
they dressed themselves in white habiliments, and decked themselves with
various ornaments. Fatigued with play, they felt inclined in the evening to
rest in the pleasurehouse belonging to the garden. Having made the other youths
take exercise in the waters, the powerful second Pandava was excessively
fatigued. So that on rising from the water, he lay down on the ground. He was
weary and under the influence of the poison. And the cool air served to spread
the poison over all his frame, so that he lost his senses at once. Seeing this Duryodhana
bound him with chords of shrubs, and threw him into the water. The insensible
son of Pandu sank down till he reached the Naga kingdom. Nagas, furnished with
fangs containing virulent venom, bit him by thousands. The vegetable poison,
mingled in the blood of the son of the Wind god, was neutralised by the
snake-poison. The serpents had bitten all over his frame, except his chest, the
skin of which was so tough that their fangs could not penetrate it.
"On regaining consciousness, the son of Kunti burst his bands
and began to press the snakes down under the ground. A remnant fled for life,
and going to their king Vasuki, represented, 'O king of snakes, a man drowned under
the water, bound in chords of shrubs; probably he had drunk poison. For when he
fell amongst us, he was insensible. But when we began to bite him, he regained
his senses, and bursting his fetters, commenced laying at us. May it please
Your Majesty to enquire who is.'
"Then Vasuki, in accordance with the prayer of the inferior
Nagas, went to the place and saw Bhimasena. Of the serpents, there was one,
named Aryaka. He was the grandfather of the father of Kunti. The lord of serpents
saw his relative and embraced him. Then, Vasuki, learning all, was pleased with
Bhima, and said to Aryaka with satisfaction, 'How are we to please him? Let him
have money and gems in profusion."
"On hearing the words of Vasuki, Aryaka said, 'O king of
serpents, when Your Majesty is pleased with him, no need of wealth for him!
Permit him to drink of rasakunda (nectar-vessels) and thus acquire immeasurable
strength. There is the strength of a thousand elephants in each one of those
vessels. Let this prince drink as much as he can.'
"The king of serpents gave his consent. And the serpents
thereupon began auspicious rites. Then purifying himself carefully, Bhimasena
facing the east began to drink nectar. At one breath, he quaffed off the
contents of a whole vessel, and in this manner drained off eight successive
jars, till he was full. At length, the serpents prepared an excellent bed for him,
on which he lay down at ease.'"
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