Mahabharata: Volume 8 (89 page)

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Authors: Bibek Debroy

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491
The word used is tata.

492
The suras are also gods. But the text uses both the words for gods, devas and suras.

493
There are eight Vasus. Though Bhishma is himself regarded as one of these Vasus born on earth, he is regarded as a ninth Vasu. However, because of his qualities, he is not ninth in merit.

494
The four stages of life.

495
There are four types of officiating priests—
hotar
(one who recites from the Rig Veda),
udgatar
(one who recites from the Sama Veda),
adhvaryu
(one who recites from the Yajur Veda) and brahman (one who recites from the Atharva Veda).

496
One of the six schools of philosophy (
darshana
) associated with the sage Kapila.

497
The text does not indicate what that single dharma is.

498
Itihasa is history and is specifically used for the two epics.

499
Specific sacred texts, in the
smriti
tradition, about dharma.

Chapter 1379(51)

500
Heaven, earth and the nether regions.

501
Vayu (wind) has seven flows—
avaha, pravaha, nivaha, varaha, udhvaha, samvaha
and
parivaha.

502
No rebirth.

Chapter 1380(52)

503
The lord of speech.

504
The moon.

505
Those born from wombs, those born from eggs, those born from seeds and those born from sweat (moisture).

506
The sages.

507
Narmada is believed to originate in Mount Rikshavat, in the Vindhyas.

508
Hastinapura.

509
The lion.

Chapter 1381(53)

510
A night consists of three yamas. So a yama is four hours.

511
Yudhishthira.

Chapter 1382(54)

512
Narada is primarily speaking to Yudhishthira.

513
The word used is tata.

514
Bhishma.

515
The word Vedanta is usually used for the Upanishads.

516
Jatis.

517
The Critical edition says
manudharma
, which brings in Manu. Some non-Critical versions say
sarvadharma
, which means all forms of dharma, without bringing in Manu.

Chapter 1383(55)

518
Bhishma.

519
Yudhishthira’s.

520
The word used is tata.

Chapter 1384(56)

521
The dharma of kings.

522
The three objectives, dharma, artha and kama.

523
Mokshadharma is the dharma that leads to emancipation or liberation.

524
Without getting bogged down by minute trivia.

525
These three are left implicit and have to be deduced. One’s weaknesses, one’s policy and the weaknesses of enemies have to be concealed.

526
Fire is quenched with water, iron is blunted by stone and kshatriyas are controlled by brahmanas.

527
Though not directly stated, this seems to mean that the king should restrain imperfect brahmanas.

528
The killing of a foetus is being equated with the killing of a brahmana.

529
Those protected by deserts, water, earth, forests, mountains and men.

530
Of the sacred texts.

531
The master’s.

Chapter 1385(57)

532
Because of excessive attachment for his wife and children.

533
The king, the army, advisers, allies, the treasury, forts and the geographical expanse of the kingdom.

534
This story has been recounted in Section 33 (Volume 3). Bahu was also known as Asita.

535
Probably referring to dharma, artha and kama.

536
The dharma of the four varnas should not be mixed up.

537
The six aspects of policy—alliances, war, marching, halting, dividing and fortifying the army and sowing dissension in the enemy.

538
Dharma, artha and kama.

539
Kubera.

540
Advisers, fortified cities, the countryside, the treasury and the army add up to five. There are these five on one’s own side and five on the side of the enemy. The king must know about these ten.

541
The king’s relatives.

542
He will not differentiate between them and him.

543
The king in question is Yudhishthira himself, who was told Rama’s (i.e., Parashurama’s) story (by Krishna) earlier in this section. Bhargava is Parashurama.

544
That is, choose a kingdom where you wish to live.

545
Son is to be interpreted as descendant. Prachetasa is Daksha and the Manu in question is Vaivasvata Manu.

546
The cowherd’s tasks are in pastures, not in the village. The barber’s tasks are in the village, not in the forest.

Chapter 1386(58)

547
Shukracharya, the preceptor of the demons.

548
This can be interpreted as fair taxation.

549
For administrative duties.

550
Corporal punishment and monetary fines.

551
This can be interpreted as superiority of kshatriyas over brahmanas.

552
The aberrations are justified if there is an overall framework of rectitude.

553
Part rectitude and part deceit.

554
Yudhishthira.

555
Hastinapura.

Chapter 1387(59)

556
This is interpreted as meaning that the knowledge of the Vedas was destroyed.

557
The gods showered down rain. Sustained by this, men offered oblations to sustain the gods.

558
The self-creating one, Brahma’s name.

559
The three objectives or categories.

560
Respectively, the qualities of purity, passion and darkness.

561
Place and time are counted as one, so that there are six and not seven.

562
The three Vedas.

563
A king might face treachery from aides and princes.

564
Sama, dana, danda, bheda are the four respective familiar principles of conciliation, gifts (to wean away), punishment and sowing dissension. Upeksha can be translated as both endurance and neglect.

565
Probably very good, good, bad and very bad
muhurta
s.

566
Dharma and artha are not gained from an asura victory.

567
The five categories are the advisers, the countryside, the fortified city, the treasury and the army. These can have three characteristics—superior, middling and inferior.

568
The text actually suggests that one should take these guides from the country one is at war with.

569
The word used is
payana,
which means drink. This is not about the blades of weapons being made to drink the enemy’s blood. It is about the way those iron blades were crafted, heated and then cooled with water.

570
Guilds (shrenis) in the enemy’s kingdom.

571
The king, the army, advisers, allies, the treasury, forts and the geographical expanse of the kingdom.

572
These are the six that arise from anger.

573
Newly acquired kingdoms. The succeeding shlokas are difficult to understand. We have interpreted them as learning about these practices in newly acquired kingdoms.

574
These numbers are about complicated relationships between kings. At the central core is a king, his main ally and the ally’s ally. The core king has an adversary, an enemy, a neutral and a king whose kingdom is geographically contiguous to the core king and the enemy, but is not necessarily a neutral. 3 multiplied by 4 gives the number of 12. Each kingdom has six elements—the king, the advisers, the countryside, the fortified city, the treasury and the army. 12 multiplied by 6 gives 72.

575
Dharma, artha and kama.

576
As a river, or as the goddess of speech.

577
The policy of chastisement.

578
The king, the advisers, the countryside, the fortified city, the treasury and the army.

579
Associated with the four Vedas.

580
Probably the Vedangas.

581
The human span of life decreases progressively from satya yuga to kali yuga. Hence, people wouldn’t have the time to read long texts.

582
Prepared by the one with large eyes, Vishalaksha or Shiva.

583
The word used is tata.

584
Named after Brihaspati.

585
Shukracharya.

586
The five elements. He too was interested in renunciation.

587
The policy of chastisement.

588
Death.

589
Because a king was needed.

590
Nishida
is an instruction to be seated.

591
That is, the son of Vena. Also known as Prithu.

592
Literally, the reckoner of the year,
samvatsara
. The word can also be translated as astrologer.

593
Vainya was the eighth because he followed Vishnu, Virajas, Kirtiman, Kardama, Ananga, Atibala and Vena.

594
Respectively, suta and
magadha
.

595
Vainya.

596
Literally, the one whose mount is a man, a name for Kubera.

597
The word for grain is
shasya
and it is difficult to pin down the number seventeen. Five types are more common—paddy (
dhanya
), beans (
mudga
), sesamum (
tila
), barley (
yava
) and black gram (
masha
).

598
The word for king is raja.
Ranjita
means pleased or delighted. Since he delighted the subjects, he came to be known as raja, from the root
ranj.
The word for king is actually
rajan
and raja is the nominative, in the singular.

599
With a play on the words kshata (wound/injury) and save (
trana
).

600
Prathita
means extended or famous. The name prithivi for earth is being linked with that word.

601
Kings are like human gods and Vainya was a king among them.

602
Prosperity personified.

603
The word used is tata.

Chapter 1388(60)

604
The officiating priest is for a specific purpose like a sacrifice, while the priest is more like a permanent appointee.

605
In general, a
maitra
is a benevolent and affectionate person who is friendly towards all beings. However, more specifically, a maitra is also a brahmana who has attained the highest level of human perfection.

606
Similar to Indra.

607
The vaishyas’.

608
The vaishya thus takes care of animals, but only ‘owns’ designated shares. When a cow is dead, the shares presumably refer to trade in the dead bodies.

609
This follows the earlier shloka, so it is not clear whether one means one-seventh or one-sixteenth. It could be either, but one-seventh seems more likely.

610
The shudra. That is, the shudra is allowed to accumulate riches under some conditions, such as spending those riches on pursuits of dharma.

611
Pinda.

612
Connected with the three Vedas.

613
This and the succeeding shlokas get into complicated questions of interpretation. The simplest interpretation is that shudras were allowed to use the mantras
svaha
and
namaskara
, but not other mantras.

614
A pakayajna is one where food is cooked and offered to gods, ancestors, guests and birds and beasts. There is the clear suggestion that a shudra would have to perform the sacrifice himself, since no brahmana would be an officiating priest. In that case, where is the question of dakshina? Presumably, dakshina was offered to brahmanas even if they did not officiate. A purnapatra is a full vessel, that is, a vessel full of food.

615
One hundred thousand of what is left dangling, probably one hundred thousand purnapatras.

616
Eternal collective sacrifices, though the desires are individual.

617
The brahmanas are part of the brahman. However, there seems to be a different suggestion too. The Vedas were originally one, but were divided. In that way, all the varnas originated with brahmanas and were later divided.

618
It is difficult to understand this and refers to the process of offering oblations. What it probably means is that spilt and impure oblations can be rendered pure through mental devotion.

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