SECTION XXVII
Digvijaya Parva continued)
Vaisampayana continued, Thus addressed, Dhananjaya replied
unto Bhagadatta, saying, 'If thou wilt give thy promise to do this, thou
hast done all I desire. And having thus subjugated the king of
Pragyotisha, Dhananjaya of long arms, the son of Kunti, then marched
thence towards the north the direction presided over by the lord of
treasures. That bull amongst men, that son of Kunti, then conquered
the mountainous tracts and their outskirts, as also the hilly regions.
And having conquered all the mountains and the kings that reigned
there, and bringing them under his sway, he exacted tributes from all.
And winning the affections of those kings and uniting himself with
them, he next marched, O king, against Vrihanta, the king of Uluka.
making this earth tremble with the sound of his drums, the clatter of
his chariot-wheels, and the roar of the elephants in his train. Vrihanta,
however, quickly coming out of his city followed by his army consisting
of four kinds of troops, gave battle to Falguna (Arjuna). And the
fight that took place between Vrihanta and Dhananjaya was terrible.
It sj happened that Vrihanta was unable to bear the prowess of the son
of Pandu. Then that invincible king of the mountainous region regarding
the son of Kunti irresistable, approached him with all his wealth.
Arjuna snatched out the kingdom from Vrihanta, but having made
peace with him marched, accompanied by that king, against Senavindu
whom he soon expelled from his kingdom. After this he subjugated
Modapura, Vamadeva, Sudaman, Susankula, the Northern Ulukas, and
the kings of those countries and peoples. Hereafter at the command of
Yudhishthira, O monarch, Arjuna, did not move from the city of
Senavindu, but sent his troops only and brought under his sway those
five countries and peoples. For Arjuna, having arrived at Devaprastha,
the city of Senavindu, took up his quarters there with his army consisting
of four kinds of forces. Thence, surrounded by the kings and the
peoples he had subjugated, the hero marched against king Viswagaswa
that bull of Puru's race. Having vanquished in battle the brave mountaineers, who were all great warriors, the son of Pandu, O king,
then occupied with the help of his troops, the town protected by the
Puru king. Having vanquished in battle the Puru king, as also the
robber tribes of the mountains, the son of Pandu brought under his
sway the seven tribes called Utsava-sanketa. That bull of the Kshatriya
race then defeated the brave Kshatriyas of Kashmira and also king
Lohita along with ten minor chiefs. Then the Trigartas, the Daravas,
the Kokonadas, and various other Kshatriyas, O king, advanced against
the son of Pandu. That Prince of the Kuru race then took the delightfull
town of Avisari, and then brought under his sway Rochamana
ruling in Uraga. Then the son of Indra (Arjuna), putting forth his
might, pressed the delightful town of Singhaputa that was well-protected
with various weapons. Then Arjuna, that bull amongst the son
of Pandu, at the head of all his troops, fiercely attacked the regions
called Suhma and Sumala. Then the son of Indra endued with great
prowess, after pressing them with great force, brought the Valhikas
always difficult of being vanquished, under his sway. Then Falguna,
the son of Pandu, taking with him a select force, defeated the Daradas
along with the Kambojas. Then the exalted son of Indra vanquished
the robber tribes that dwelt in the north-eastern frontier and those
also that dwelt in the woods. And, O great king, the son of Indra also
subjugated the allied tribes of the Lohas, the eastern Kambojas, and
northern Rishikas. And the battle with the Rishikas was fierce in the
extreme. Indeed, the fight that took place between them and the son
of Pritha was equal to that between the gods and the Asuras in which
Taraka (the wife of Vrihaspati) had become the cause of so much
slaughter. And defeating, O king, the Rishikas in the field of battle,
Arjuna took from them as tribute eight horses that were of the colour
of the parrot's breast, as also other horses of the hues of the peacock,
born in northern and other climes and endued with high speed. At last
having conquered all the Himalayas and the Nishkuta mountains, that
bull among men, arriving at the White mountains, encamped on its
breast."
Thus ends the twenty-seventh section in the Digvijaya Parva of
the Sabha Parva.