SECTION 73
Vaisampayana said,--'O monarch, it was then
that Gandhari, afflicted with grief, addressed king Dhritarashtra and said,
"When Duryodhana was born, Vidura had said, 'It is well to send this
disgrace of the race to the other world. He cried repeatedly and dissonantly
like a jackal. It is certain he will prove the destruction of our race. Take this
to heart; sink not, for thy own fault, into an ocean of calamity. O lord,
accord not thy approbation to the counsels of the wicked ones of immature
years. Be not thou the cause of the terrible destruction of this race. Who is
there that will break an embankment which hath been completed, or re-kindle a
conflagration which hath been extinguished? Who is there that will provoke the
peaceful sons of Pritha? Thou rememberest, everything, but still I will call
thy attention to this. The scriptures can never control the wicked-minded for
good or evil. And, a person of immature understanding will never act as one of
mature years. Let thy sons follow thee as their leader. Let them not be
separated from thee for ever by losing their lives. Therefore, at my word,
abandon this wretch of our race. Thou couldst not, from parental affection, do
it before. Know that the time hath come for the destruction of race through
him. Err not. Let thy mind, guided by counsels of peace, virtue, and true
policy, be what it naturally is. That prosperity which is acquired by the aid
of wicked acts, is soon destroyed; while that which is won by mild means taketh
root and descendeth from generation to generation."
"The king, thus addressed by Gandhari
who pointed out to him in such language the path of virtue, replied unto her,
saying,--'If the destruction of our race is come, let it take place freely. I
am ill able to prevent it. Let it be as they these my sons’ desire. Let the Kauntheyas
return. And let my sons again gamble with the Kauntheyas."
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