SECTION 189
(Swayamvara Parva continued)
"Vaisampayana said, 'Then those youthful princes adorned with
ear-rings, vying with one another and each regarding himself accomplished in
arms and gifted with might, stood up brandishing their weapons. And intoxicated
with pride of beauty, prowess, lineage, knowledge, wealth, and youth, they were
like Himalayan elephants in the season of rut with crowns split from excess of
temporal juice. And beholding each other with jealousy and influenced by the
god of desire, they suddenly rose up from their royal seats, exclaiming
'Krishna shall be mine.' And the Kshatriyas assembled in that amphitheatre,
each desirous of winning the daughter of Drupada, looked like the celestial
standing round Uma, the daughter of the King of mountains. Afflicted with the
shafts of the god of the flowery bow and with hearts utterly lost in the
contemplation of
Krishna, those princes descended into the amphitheatre for winning
the Panchala maiden and began to regard even their best friends with jealousy.
And there came also the celestials on their cars, with the Rudras and the
Adityas, the Vasus and the twin Aswins, the Swadhas and all the Marutas, and Kubera
with Yama walking ahead. And there came also the Daityas and the Suparnas, the
great Nagas and the celestial Rishis, the Guhyakas and the Charanas and
Viswavasu and Narada and Parvata, and the principal Gandharvas with Apsaras.
And Halayudha and Janardana (Krishna) and the chief of the Vrishni, Andhaka,
and Yadava tribes who obeyed the leadership of Krishna were also there, viewing
the scene. And Pandavas attracted towards Draupadi, Krishna the foremost of
Yadu heroes began to reflect. And he said unto Rama, 'That is Yudhishthira;
that is Bhima with Jishnu; and those are the twin heroes.' And Rama surveying
them slowly cast a glance of satisfaction at Krishna. Biting their nether lips
in wrath, the other heroes there--sons and grandsons of kings--with their eyes
and hearts and thoughts set on Krishna, looked with expanded eyes on Draupadi alone
without noticing the Pandavas. And the sons of Pritha also, beholding Draupadi,
were all likewise struck by the shafts of Kama. And crowded with celestial Rishis
and Gandharvas and Suparnas and Nagas and Asuras and Siddhas, and filled with
celestial perfumes and scattered over with celestial flowers, and resounding
with the kettle-drum and the deep hum of infinite voices, and echoing with the
softer music of the flute, the Vina, and the tabor, the cars of the celestials
could scarcely find a passage through the firmament. Then those princes--Karna,
Duryodhana, Salwa, Salya, Aswatthaman, Kratha, Sunitha, Vakra, the ruler of
Kalinga and Banga, Pandya, Paundra, the ruler of Videha, the chief of the
Yavanas, and many other sons and grandsons of kings,--sovereigns of
territories,--one after another began to exhibit prowess for winning that
maiden of unrivalled beauty. Adorned with crowns, garlands, bracelets, and
other ornaments, endued with mighty arms, possessed of prowess and vigour and
bursting with strength and energy, those princes could not, even in
imagination, string that bow of extraordinary stiffness.
"And some amongst those kings in exerting with swelling lips
each according to his strength, education, skill, and energy,--to string that bow,
were tossed on the ground and lay perfectly motionless for some time. Their
strength spent and their crowns and garlands loosened from their persons, they
began to pant for breath and their ambition of winning that fair maiden was
cooled. Tossed by that tough bow, and their garlands and bracelets and other
ornaments disordered, they began to utter exclamations of woe. And that assemblage
of monarchs, their hope of obtaining Krishna gone, looked sad and woeful. And
beholding the plight of those monarchs, Karna that foremost of all wielders of
the bow went to where the bow was, and quickly raising it strung it and placed
the arrows on the string. And beholding Karna of the Suta tribe--like unto
fire, or Soma, or Surya himself, resolved to shoot the mark, the sons of Kundi--regarded
the mark as already shot and brought down upon the ground. But seeing Karna,
Draupadi
loudly said, 'I will not select a Suta for my lord.' Then Karna,
laughing in vexation and casting glance at the Sun, threw aside the bow already
drawn to a circle.
Then when all those Kshatriyas gave up the task, the heroic king
of the Chedis Sisupala, the son of Damaghosa, in endeavouring to string the
bow, himself fell upon his knees on the ground. Then king Jarasandha endued with
great strength and powers, approaching the bow stood there for some moment,
fixed and motionless like a mountain. Tossed by the bow, he too fell upon his
knees on the ground, and rising up, the monarch left the amphitheatre for
returning to his kingdom. Then the great hero Salya, the king of Madra, endued
with great strength, in endeavouring to string the bow fell upon his knees on
the ground. At last when in that assemblage consisting of highly respectable
people, all the monarchs had become subjects of derisive talk Jishnu, the son of
Kunti--desired to string the bow and placed the arrows on the bow-string.'"
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