The Mahabharata

Book 1: Adi Parva

Kisari Mohan Ganguli, tr.

[1883-1896]

SECTION CLI

(Jatugriha Parva continued)

“Vaisampayana said, ‘About this time, the learned Vidura had sent into those
woods a man of pure character and much trusted by him. This person going to where
he had been directed, saw the Pandavas with their mother in the forest employed
in a certain place in measuring the depth of a river. The design that the wicked
Duryodhana had formed had been, through his spies, known to Vidura of great intelligence,
and, therefore, he had sent that prudent person unto the Pandavas. Sent by Vidura
unto them, he showed the Pandavas on the sacred banks of the Ganga a boat with
engines and flags, constructed by trusted artificers and capable of withstanding
wind and wave and endued with the speed of the tempest or of thought. He then
addressed the Pandavas in these words to show that he had really been sent by
Vidura, ‘O Yudhishthira, he said, “listen to these words the learned Vidura had
said (unto thee) as a proof of the fact that I come from him. Neither the consumer
of straw and the wood nor the drier of dew ever burneth the inmates of a hole
in the forest. He escapeth from death who protecteth himself knowing this, etc.’
By these credentials know me to be the person who has been truly sent by Vidura
and to be also his trusted agent. Vidura, conversant with everything, hath again
said, ‘O son of Kunti, thou shalt surely defeat in battle Karna, and Duryodhana
with his brothers, and Sakuni.’ This boat is ready on the waters, and it will
glide pleasantly thereon, and shall certainly bear you all from these regions!’

“Then beholding those foremost of men with their mother pensive and sad he
caused them to go into the boat that was on the Ganga, and accompanied them himself.
Addressing them again, he said, ‘Vidura having smelt your heads and embraced you
(mentally), hath said again that in commencing your auspicious journey and going
alone you should never be careless.’

“Saying these words unto those heroic princes, the person sent by Vidura took
those bulls among men over to the other side of the Ganga in his boat. And having
taken them over the water and seen them all safe on the opposite bank, he uttered
the word ‘Jaya’ (victory) to their success and then left them and returned to
the place whence he had come.

“The illustrious Pandavas also sending through that person some message to
Vidura, began, after having crossed the Ganga, to proceed with haste and in great
secrecy.'”