The
Mahabharata
Book
14: Aswamedha Parva
Kisari
Mohan Ganguli, tr.
[1883-1896]
This
book, one of the concluding portions of the Mahabharata, is notable for several
reasons.
The
first is a long interposed section of Upanishadic material, known the as Anugita.
This occupies a large part of this book; Arjuna asks Krishna to repeat his battlefield
discourse (the Bhaghavad Gita in Book 6). What follows is a somewhat disjointed
metaphysical treatise which was probably composed at a much later date than
the main narrative.
The
Mahabharata
Book
14: Aswamedha Parva
Kisari
Mohan Ganguli, tr.
[1883-1896]
Following
the Anugita is the story of Utanka, a disciple of Krishna who undergoes a fairy-tale-like
journey involving a cannibal king, magic earrings and a journey to the underworld.
Finally
there is the story of the great Horse Sacrifice of Yudhishthira, which resumes
the main narrative of the Mahabharata. The Horse Sacrifice was the premiere
ceremony of the Yajur-Veda, a scapegoat-like expiatory
ritual of unmatched extravagance. A magnificent wild black horse is set loose
from Hastinapur, the Kuru capital. In hot pursuit is the Kuru army, let by Arjuna.
They must follow this horse, wherever it may lead. They are required to engage
in ritual combat with the Kshatria (military caste) of whatever territory it
enters, without killing the leader of the opposing force. Then they invite the
trespassed nation to the sacrifice. In the course of this journey they settle
some old scores.
The
horse returns to the capital city, and the ritual starts; amidst a pavilion
of pure gold the horse is sacrificed. However, at the last moment, a mongoose
with a gold head pops out of the ground and states that the Horse Sacrifice
is of less meaning than a Brahman who sacrificed a handful of barley during
a famine. With this bizarre anticlimax the book--and possibly the original narrative
of the Mahabharata--ends.
--John
Bruno Hare, January 16, 2004.
Aswamedhika
Parva
Anugita Parva