Śoka-śamana: Kṛṣṇa’s Consolation and Nārada’s Exempla to Sṛñjaya
Chapter 29
यः सहस्न॑ सहस्राणां श्वेतानश्वानवासृजत् । सहस्र॑ च सहस्राणां कन्या हेमपरिष्कृता:
yaḥ sahasna sahasrāṇāṃ śvetān aśvān avāsṛjat | sahasraṃ ca sahasrāṇāṃ kanyā hemapariṣkṛtāḥ ||
Dijo Vāyu-deva: «Aquel que soltó miles y miles de caballos blancos, y asimismo otorgó miles y miles de doncellas engalanadas con oro.»
वायुदेव उवाच
The verse highlights the dharmic ideal of dāna—lavish, public-minded generosity—by portraying immense gifts (horses and gold-adorned maidens) as markers of merit and righteous conduct, especially in discussions of ethical kingship and virtue.
Vāyu-deva is describing a person’s extraordinary acts of giving: releasing vast numbers of white horses and granting vast numbers of maidens ornamented with gold, as part of a larger discourse in Śānti Parva on virtue, merit, and righteous action.