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Vyasa Mahabharata IntraText CT - Text |
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CONCLUSIONTHE real Epic ends with the war and with the funerals of the deceased warriors, as we have stated before, and Yudhishthir's Horse-Sacrifice is rather a crowning ornament than a part of the solid edifice. What follows the sacrifice is in no sense a part of the real Epic; it consists merely of concluding personal narratives of the heroes who have figured in the poem. Dhrita-rashtra retires into a forest with his queen Gandhari, and Pritha, the mother of the Pandav brothers, accompanies them. In the solitude of the forest the old Dhrita-rashtra sees as in a vision the spirits of all the slain warriors, his sons and grandsons and kins men, clad and armed as they were in battle. The spirits disappear in the morning at the bidding of Vyasa, who had called them up. At last Dhrita-rashtra and Gandhari and Pritha are burnt to death in a forest conflagration, death by fire being considered holy. Krishna at Dwarka meets with strange and tragic adventures. The Vrishnis and the Andbakas become irreligious and addicted to drinking, and fall a prey to internal dissensions. Valadeva and Krishna die shortly after, and the city of the Yadavas is swallowed up by the ocean. Then follow the two concluding Books of the Epic, the Great Journey and the Ascent to Heaven, so beautifully rendered into English by Sir Edwin Arnold. On hearing of the death of their friend Krishna, the Pandav brothers place Prakshit, the grandson of Arjun, on the throne, and retire to the Himalayas. Draupadi drops down dead on the way, then Sahadeva, then Nakula, then Arjun, and then Bhima. Yudhishthir alone proceeds to heaven in person in a celestial car. There Yudhishthir undergoes some trial, bathes in the celestial Ganges, and rises with a celestial body. He then meets Krishna, now in his heavenly form, blazing in splendour and glory. He meets his brothers whom he had lost on earth, but who are now Immortals in the sky, clad in heavenly forms. INDRA himself appears before Yudhishthir, and introduces him to others who were dear to him on earth, and are dear to him in heaven. Thus speaks INDRA to Yudhishthir: "This is She the fair Immortal! Her no human mother bore, By the Wielder of the Trident she was waked to form and life, These are bright aérial beings, went for thee to lower earth, This is monarch Dhrita-rashtra who doth o'er Gandharvas reign, Like the Sun in ruddy splendour, for the Sun inspired his birth, Mdst the Sadhyas and the Maruts, 'midst Immortals pure and
bright, Seek and find the brave Satyaki who upheld thy cause so well, This is gallant Abhimanyu whom the fair Subhadra bore, Abhimanyu son of Arjun, wielding Arjun's peerless might, This, Yudhishthir, is thy father, by thy mother joined in heaven, This is Bhishma stainless warrior, by the Vasus is his place, These and other mighty warriors in the earthly battle slain, They have cast their mortal bodies, crossed the radiant gate of heaven, Let them strive by kindly action, gentle speech, endurance long,
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Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
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