SECTION I
(Aranyaka Parva)
Having bowed down to Narayana, and Nara the foremost of male beings,
and the goddess Saraswati also, must the word Jaya be uttered.
Janamejaya said, "O thou foremost of regenerate ones, deceitfully
defeated at dice by the sons of Dhritarashtra and their counsellors,
incensed by those wicked ones that thus brought about a fierce animosity,
and addressed in language that was so cruel, what did the Kuru princes,
my ancestors the sons of Pritha (then) do ? How also did the sons of
Pritha, equal unto Sakra in prowess, deprived of affluence and suddenly
overwhelmed with misery, pass their days in the forest ? Who
followed the steps of those princes plunged in excess of affliction ? And
how did those high-souled ones bear themselves and derive their sustenance,
and where did they put up ? And, O illustrious ascetic and foremost of
Brahmanas, how did those twelve years (of exile) of those warriors who
were slayers of foes, pass away in the forest ? And undeserving of pain,
how did that princess, the best of her sex, devoted to her husbands,
eminently virtuous, and always speaking the truth, endure that painful
exile in the forest ? thou of ascetic wealth, tell me all this in detail,
for, O Brahmana, I desire to hear thee narrate the history of those heroes
possessed of abundant prowess and lustre. Truly my curiosity is great."
Vaisampayana said, "Thus defeated at dice and incensed by the
wicked sons of Dhritarashtra and their counsellors, the sons of Pritha set
out from Hastinapura. And issuing through"
Vardha?nana" gate of the city,
the Pandavas bearing their weapons and accompanied by Draupadi set out
in a northernly direction. Indrasena and others, with servants numbering
altogether fourteen, with their wives, followed them on swift cars. And
the citizens learning of their departure became overwhelmed with sorrow,
and began to censure Bhishma and Vidura and Drona and Gautama.
And having met together they thus addressed one another fearlessly :
"Alas ! Our families, we ourselves, and our homes are all gone,
when the wicked Duryodhana, backed by the son of Suvala, by Kama,
and Dussasana, aspireth to this kingdom. And, Oh our families, our
(ancestral) usages, our virtue and prosperity, are all doomed where this
sinful wretch supported by wretches as sinful aspireth to the kingdom !
And, Oh, how can happiness be there where these are not ! Duryodhana
beareth malice towards all superiors, hath taken leave of good conduct,
and quarreleth with those that are near to him in blood. Covetous and
vain and mean, he is cruel by nature. The whole earth is doomed when
Duryodhana becometh its ruler. Thither, therefore, let us proceed whither
the merciful and high-minded sons of Pandu with passions under control
and victorious over foes, and possessed of modesty and renown, and devoted
to pious practices, repair !'"
Vaisampayana said, "And saying this, the citizens went after the
Pandavas, and having met them, they all, with joined hands, thus
addressed the sons of Kunti and Madri :
"Blest be ye ! Where will ye go, leaving us in grief ? We will
follow you whithersoever ye will go ! Surely have we been distressed upon
learning that ye have been deceitfully vanquished by relentless enemies !
It behoveth you not to forsake us that are your loving subjects and
devoted friends always seeking your welfare and employed in doing what is
agreeable to you ! We desire not to be overwhelmed in certain destruction
living in the dominions of the Kuru king. Ye bulls among men, listen as
we indicate the merits and demerits springing respectively from association
with what is good and bad ! As cloth, water, the ground, and sesame seeds
are perfumed by association with flowers, even so are qualities ever the
product of association. Verily association with fools produceth an
illusion that entangleth the mind, as daily communion with the good and
the wise leadeth to the practice of virtue. Therefore, they that desire
emancipation should associate with those that are wise and old and honest
and pure in conduct and possessed of ascetic merit They should be waited
upon whose triple possessions, viz., knowledge (of the Vedas), origin
and acts, are all pure, and association with them is even superior to (the
study of the) scriptures. Devoid of the religious acts as we are, we shall
yet reap religious merit by association with the righteous, as we should
come by sin by waiting upon the sinful. The very sight and touch of the
dishonest, and converse and association with them ; cause diminution
of virtue, and men (that are doomed to these) never attain Durity of mind.
Association with the base impaireth the understanding, as, indeed, with
the indifferent maketh it indifferent, while communion with the good ever
exalteth it. All those attributes which are spoken of in the world as
the sources of religious merit, of worldly prosperity and sensual pleasures,
which are regarded by the people, extolled in the Vedas, and approved by
the well-behaved, exist in you, separately and jointly ! Therefore, desirous
of our own welfare, we wish to live amongst you who possess those
attributes !'
"Yudhishthira said, 'Blessed are we since the people with the
Brahmanas at their head, moved by affection and compassion credit us with merits we have not. I however, with my brothers, would ask all of
you to do one thing. Ye should not, through affection and pity for us, act
otherwise ! Our grand-father Bhishma, the king, (Dhritarashtra), Vidura,
my mother and most of my well-wishers, are all in the city of Hastinapura.
Therefore, if ye are minded to seek our welfare, cherish ye them with care,
uniting together as they are overwhelmed with sorrow and afflictions.
Grieved at our departure, ye have come far ! Go ye back, and let your
hearts be directed with tenderness towards the relatives I entrust to you
as pledges ! This, of all others, is the one act upon which my heart is set,
and by doing this ye would give me great satisfaction and pay me your
best regards !'"
Vaisampayana continued, "Thus exhorted by Yudhishthira the just,
the people in a body set up a loud wail exclaiming, 'Alas, king !' And
afflicted and overwhelmed with sorrow on remembering the virtues of
Pritha's son, they unwillingly retraced their steps asking leave of the
Pandavas.
"The citizens having ceased to follow, the Pandavas ascended their
cars, and setting out reached (the site of) the mighty banian tree called
Pvamana on the banks of the Ganges. And reaching the site of the banian
about the close of the day, the heroic sons of Pandu purified themselves
by touching the (sacred) water, and passed the night there. And afflicted
with woe they spent that night taking water alone as their sole sustenance.
Certain Brahmanas belonging to both classes viz., those that maintained
the sacrificial fire and those that maintained it not, who had, with their
disciples and relatives, out of affection followed the Pandavas thither also
passed the night with them. And surrounded by those utterers of Brahma,
the king shone resplendent in their midst. And that evening, at once
beautiful and terrible, those Brahmanas. having lighted their (sacred) fires,
began to chant the Vedas and hold mutual converse. And those foremost
of Brahmanas, with swan-sweet voices spent the night, comforting that
best of Kurus the king."
And thus ends the first section in the Aranyaka Parva of the Vana
Parva.