Nārada’s Account of the Kaliṅga Svayaṃvara: Duryodhana’s Seizure and Karṇa’s Escort
ततः संश्राव्यमाणेषु राज्ञां नामसु भारत | अत्यक्रामद् धार्तराष्ट्रं सा कन्या वरवर्णिनी
tataḥ saṁśrāvyamāṇeṣu rājñāṁ nāmasu bhārata | atyakrāmad dhārtarāṣṭraṁ sā kanyā varavarṇinī bharatanandana ||
भरतनन्दन! जब राजाओं के नाम ऊँचे स्वर से सुनाकर उनका परिचय कराया जाने लगा, तब वह सुन्दर वर्णवाली राजकन्या धृतराष्ट्र-पुत्र (दुर्योधन) के सामने से आगे बढ़ गई।
नारद उवाच
The verse highlights personal agency and social signaling in a royal selection context: as candidates are publicly identified, the maiden’s movement past Duryodhana implies a deliberate preference or rejection. Ethically, it underscores that status alone does not guarantee acceptance; choice must align with discernment and propriety.
During a formal presentation where kings’ names are being proclaimed, a beautiful princess proceeds forward and passes beyond the Dhārtarāṣṭra prince—understood as Duryodhana—suggesting she does not stop for him and continues toward others.