SECTION 60
(Adivansavatarana Parva continued)
'Sauti said, 'Hearing that Janamejaya was installed in the snake-sacrifice,
the learned Rishi Krishna-Dwaipayana went thither on the occasion. And he, the
grand-father of the Pandavas, was born in an island of the Yamuna, of the
virgin Kali by Sakti's son, Parasara. And the illustrious one developed by his
will alone his body as soon as he was born, and mastered the Vedas with their
branches, and all the histories. And he readily obtained that which no one
could obtain by asceticism, by the study of the Vedas, by vows, by fasts, by
progeny, and by sacrifice. And the first of Veda-knowing ones, he divided the
Vedas into four parts. And the Brahmana Rishi had knowledge of the supreme
Brahma, knew the past by intuition, was holy, and cherished truth. Of sacred
deeds and great fame, he begot Pandu and Dhritarashtra and Vidura in order to
continue the line of Santanu.
"And the high-souled Rishi, with his disciples all conversant
with the Vedas and their branches, entered the sacrificial pavilion of the
royal sage, Janamejaya. And he saw that the king Janamejaya was seated in the sacrificial
region like the god Indra, surrounded by numerous Sadasyas, by kings of various
countries whose coronal locks had undergone the sacred bath, and by competent
Ritwiks like unto Brahman himself. And that foremost one of Bharata's race, the
royal sage Janamejaya, beholding the Rishi come, advanced quickly with his
followers and relatives in great joy. And the king with the approval of his
Sadasyas, gave the Rishi a golden seat as Indra did to Brihaspati . And when
the Rishi, capable of granting boons and adored by the celestial Rishis
themselves, had been seated, the king of kings worshipped him according to the
rites of the scriptures. And the king then offered him--his grandfather Krishna—who
fully deserved them, water to wash his feet and mouth, and the Arghya, and
kine. And accepting those offerings from the Pandava Janamejaya and ordering
the kine also not to be slain, Vyasa became much gratified. And the king, after
those adorations bowed to his great-grandfather, and sitting in joy asked him
about his welfare. And the illustrious Rishi also, casting his eyes upon him
and asking him about his welfare, worshipped the Sadasyas, having been before
worshipped by them all. And after all this, Janamejaya with all his Sadasyas,
questioned that first of Brahmanas, with joined palms as follows:
'O Brahmana, thou hast seen with thy own eyes the acts of the
Kurus and the Pandavas. I am desirous of hearing thee recite their history.
What was the cause of the disunion amongst them that was fruitful of such extraordinary
deeds? Why also did that great battle, which caused the death of countless
creatures occur between all my grandfathers—their clear sense over-clouded by
fate? Tell me all this in full as everything had happened.'
"Hearing those words of Janamejaya, Krishna-Dwaipayana
directed his disciple Vaisampayana seated by his side, saying, 'The discord
that happened between the Kurus and the Pandavas of old, narrate all to the king
even as thou hast heard from me.'
"Then that blessed Brahmana, at the command of his preceptor
recited the whole of that history unto the king, the Sadasyas, and all the
chieftains there assembled. And he told them all about the hostility and the
utter extinction of the Kurus and the Pandavas.'"
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