SECTION XXXIX
(Arghyaharana Parva continued.)
Vaisampayana said, "The mighty Bhishma ceased, having said
this. Sahadeva then answered (Sisupaia) in words of grave import,
saying, 'If amongst ye there be any king that cannot bear to see
Kesava of dark hue, the slayer of Kesi, the possessor of wnmeasurable
energy, worshipped by me, this my foot is placed on the heads of all
mighty ones (like him). When I say this, let that one give me an adequate
reply. And let those kings that possess intelligence approve the
worship of Krishna who is the preceptor, the father, the guru, and
deserveth the Arghya and the worship (already offered unto him).'
"When Sahadeva thus showed his foot, no one among those intelligent
and wise and proud and mighty monarchs said anything. And a
shower of flowers fell on Sahadeva's head, and an incorporeal voice
said, 'Excellent, excellent.' Then Narada clad in black deer-skin, speaking of both the future and the past, that dispeller of all doubts, fully
acquainted with all the worlds, said in the midst of innumerable creatures,
these words of the clearest import, 'Those men that will not
worship the lotus-eyed Krishna should be regarded as dead though moving,
and should never be talked to on any occasion.'"
Vaisampayana continued, "Then that god among men, Sahadeva
cognisant of the distinction between a Brahmana and a Kshatriya,
having worshipped those that deserved worship, completed that ceremony.
But upon Krishna having received the first worship, Sunitha
(Sisupala) that mower of foes with eyes red as copper from anger,
addressed those rulers of men and said, 'When I am here to head ye all,
what are ye thinking of now ? Arrayed let us stand in battle against
the assembled Vrishnis and the Pandavas ?' And the bull of the Chedis,
having thus stirred the kings up, began to consult with them how to
obstruct the completion of the sacrifice. All the invited monarchs who
had come to the sacrifice, with Sunitha as their chief, looked angry and
their faces became pale. They all said, 'We must so act that the final
sacrificial rite performed by Yudhishthira and the worship of Krishna
may not be regarded as having been acquiesced in by us. And impelled
by a belief in their power and great assurance, the kings, deprived of
reason through anger, began to say this. And being moved by selfconfidence
and smarting under the insult offered unto them, the
monarchs repeatedly exclaimed thus. Though their friends sought to
appease them, their faces glowed with anger like those of roaring lions
driven away from their preys. Krishna then understood that the vast
sea of monarchs with its countless waves of troops was preparing for a
terrific rush."
Thus ends the thirty-ninth section in the Arghyaharana Parva of
the Sabha Parva.