Page:The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa (1884).djvu/182

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148
MAHABHARATA.

orders to his gate-keepers not to admit anybody without his knowledge.'

And so ends the fifty-first Section in the Astika of the Adi Parva.


Section LII.
(Astika Parva continued.)

Sauti said, "The Snake-sscrifice then commenced according to due form. And the sacrificial priests, competent in their respective duties according to the ordinance, clad in black garments and their eyes red from contact with smoke, poured clarified butter into the blazing fire, uttering proper mantras. And causing the hearts of all the snakes to tremble with fear, they poured clarified butter into the mouth of Agni uttering the names of the snakes. And the snakes thereupon began to fall into the blazing fire, benumbed and piteously calling upon each other. And swollen and breathing hard, and twining each other with their heads and tails, they came in large numbers and fell into the fire. The white, the black, the blue, the old, and the young, all fell alike into the fire, uttering various cries. Those measuring a cross, and those measuring a yojana, and those of the measure of a gokarna, fell continuously with great violence into that first of all fires. And thus hundreds and thousands, and ten thousands and hundred thonsands of snakes, deprived of all control over their limbs, perished on that occasion. And amongst those that perished, there were some that were like horses, others like the trunks of elephants, and others of huge bodies and strength like maddened elephants. Of various colors and of virulent poison, terrible and looking like maces furnished with iron spikes, of great strength, ever inclined to bite, the snakes afflicted with their mother's curse, fell into the fire.

And so ends the fifty-second Section in the Astika of the Adi Parva.