Adhyāya 6: Pañca-mahābhūta–guṇa-nirdeśa and Sudarśana-dvīpa
Five Elements, Sensory Qualities, and a Cosmographic Island
देवासुराणां सर्वेषां श्वेतपर्वत उच्यते । गन्धर्वा निषधे नित्यं नीले ब्रह्मर्षयस्तथा । शुज्भवांस्तु महाराज देवानां प्रतिसंचर:
sañjaya uvāca | devāsurāṇāṁ sarveṣāṁ śvetaparvata ucyate | gandharvā niṣadhe nityaṁ nīle brahmarṣayas tathā | śuṅgavāṁs tu mahārāja devānāṁ pratisañcaraḥ ||
Wika ni Sañjaya: “Ang Śvetaparvata ay sinasabing pinagsasaluhang tahanan ng lahat—mga diyos at mga asura. Ang mga Gandharva ay laging naninirahan sa Niṣadha, at gayundin ang mga Brahmarṣi sa Nīla. Ngunit ang Śuṅgavān, O dakilang hari, ay pook ng pamamahinga at paglilibang na tanging mga diyos lamang ang dinadalaw.”
संजय उवाच
The verse maps a moral-cosmic order onto geography: different classes of beings have distinct domains, and some spaces are shared (devas and asuras at Śvetaparvata) while others are exclusive (Śuṅgavān for devas). This reflects the epic’s concern with gradations of purity, privilege, and rightful sphere (adhikāra).
Sañjaya, speaking to King Dhṛtarāṣṭra, describes mythic mountains and their inhabitants—where gods, asuras, Gandharvas, and Brahmarṣis reside—providing a cosmographical catalogue within Bhīṣma Parva’s broader scene-setting.