Duḥṣantasya Vana-praveśaḥ
King Duḥṣanta’s Entry into the Forest Hunt
धर्माद् युधिष्ठिरो जज्ञे मारुताच्च वृकोदर: । इन्द्रादू धनंजय: श्रीमान् सर्वशस्त्रभृतां वर:
dharmād yudhiṣṭhiro jajñe mārutāc ca vṛkodaraḥ | indrād dhanañjayaḥ śrīmān sarvaśastrabhṛtāṃ varaḥ ||
دھرم سے یُدھِشٹھِر پیدا ہوئے، ماروت (وایو دیو) سے وِرکودر (بھیم)، اور اِندر سے شریمان دھننجے (ارجن)—جو تمام اسلحہ برداروں میں سب سے برتر تھے۔
दाश उवाच
The verse links each hero’s defining virtue to a divine source: Yudhiṣṭhira’s commitment to righteousness is grounded in Dharma, Bhīma’s power in the Wind-god, and Arjuna’s martial supremacy in Indra. It frames ethical authority and heroic capability as expressions of cosmic order rather than mere human accident.
A fisherman (dāśa) is recounting the births of the Pāṇḍava brothers, identifying their divine fathers and highlighting Arjuna’s preeminence among weapon-bearers. The passage functions as a genealogical and character-defining statement within the Adi Parva narrative.