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Mahabharata — Shalya Parva, Shloka 42

Indratīrtha–Ādityatīrtha: Balarāma’s Ritual Bathing, Dāna, and Sacred-Historical Recollections

दिव्या मनोरमा: पुण्या: कथा: शुआव सा तदा । अतीता सा त्वनावृष्टिर्घोरा द्वादशवार्षिकी

divyā manoramāḥ puṇyāḥ kathāḥ śuśrāva sā tadā | atītā sā tv anāvṛṣṭir ghorā dvādaśavārṣikī ||

সেই সময় সে দিব্য, মনোহর ও পরম পুণ্যময় কাহিনি শুনতে লাগল। ইতিমধ্যে বারো বছরব্যাপী সেই ভয়ংকর অনাবৃষ্টি অবসান হল। এভাবে সেই অতিশয় দুঃসহ কাল তার কাছে যেন এক দিনের মতোই কেটে গেল।

{'divyāḥ''divine, heavenly', 'manoramāḥ': 'charming, pleasing to the mind', 'puṇyāḥ': 'holy, meritorious, purifying', 'kathāḥ': 'stories, narratives (often with moral/religious import)', 'śuśrāva': "she heard (perfect of √śru, 'to hear')", 'sā': 'she', 'tadā': 'then, at that time', 'atītā': 'passed, elapsed, gone by', 'anāvṛṣṭiḥ': 'drought, absence of rain', 'ghorā': 'terrible, dreadful', 'dvādaśavārṣikī': 'lasting twelve years'}
{'divyāḥ':

वैशम्पायन उवाच

वैशम्पायन (Vaiśampāyana)
अनावृष्टि (drought)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights the sustaining and purifying force of śravaṇa—listening to sacred, auspicious narratives—which helps one endure prolonged hardship with steadiness; even severe suffering can feel shortened when borne with inner support and faith.

Vaiśampāyana reports that a woman hears holy, delightful, divine stories, and during this period the terrible twelve-year drought passes and finally ends, with the time of distress seeming to pass swiftly.