Abstract
The Mahabharata ends not with
triumph but with exhaustion. The final parva, Svargarohana, describes the
Pandavas' final journey: they leave Ayodhya, walk toward the Himalayas, and
fall one by one on the road, each at the moment when a specific failing becomes
finally decisive. Only Yudhishthira and a dog reach the mountain. In heaven,
Yudhishthira finds the Kauravas inhabiting pleasant realms while the Pandavas
dwell in what appears to be hell. He refuses to leave them. He is then shown
that the suffering was illusory, the final test of his moral consistency, and
heaven is revealed in its full reality. And yet the text does not end in
celebration. It ends with Vyasa's direct address to the reader, with the
observation that dharma is the highest principle and artha the highest purpose,
and with a quality of exhausted, hard-won clarity that is as far from
triumphant conclusion as literature can get. This article explores why the
Mahabharata chooses this specific kind of ending, what the Svargarohana Parva's
specific images and incidents reveal about what the text has been building
toward, and what the tradition means when it calls this text the fifth Veda and
says it contains everything.
Keywords: Svargarohana Parva,
ending, Mahabharata, silence, aftermath, Yudhishthira, heaven, Pandavas, Vyasa,
Sanatana Dharma, exhaustion, wisdom
Introduction
The reader who reaches the final
pages of the Mahabharata expecting something like the Ramayana's return to
Ayodhya, the restored order, the celebrated homecoming, the world set right
again, will be disappointed or will miss the point. The Mahabharata does not
end with the world set right. It ends with the world having been through something
irreversible, something that cost so much that the nature of the cost has
become the final teaching.
The war is over. Yudhishthira rules
from Hastinapura for many years. And then, one day, he sees an omen and knows
it is time to go. He gives the kingdom to Parikshit, the grandson who was born
dead and revived, and sets out with his brothers and Draupadi on the great
journey northward toward the Himalayas. They walk. They do not ride. They take
nothing with them. They go as they are, toward whatever the mountains offer.
And one by one, they fall.
The Falling: One
by One
Draupadi falls first. Bhima asks
Yudhishthira why, and Yudhishthira names her failing: she loved Arjuna more
than the others, played favourites among her husbands, and this partiality was
the thing that brought her down. Sahadeva falls: he was too proud of his own
wisdom. Nakula falls: he was too proud of his own beauty. Arjuna falls: he
boasted that he would defeat all enemies in a day, and could not always do it.
Bhima falls: he ate too much and despised the weak.
Each death names a specific
failing, and the naming is the text's last act of honest assessment. These are
the Pandavas: the dharmic heroes, the people who survived the Kurukshetra war,
the people on the right side of the epic's cosmic struggle. And they each fell
on the final road for reasons that were genuinely their own, genuinely earned,
genuinely the consequence of specific qualities they carried and never fully
overcame. The text does not spare them this final accounting.
सर्वे क्षयान्ता निचयाः पतनान्ताः समुच्छ्रयाः। संयोगा विप्रयोगान्ताः मरणान्तं च जीवितम्॥
Sarve kshayanta
nicayah patanantah samucchhrayah, Samyoga viprayogantah maranantam ca jivitam.
(All accumulations
end in exhaustion; all heights end in falls; all meetings end in separation;
and all life ends in death.)
Mahabharata, Stri
Parva, 2.13
This is the most compressed
statement of the Mahabharata's final vision: everything ends. Not as a counsel
of despair but as the most honest possible description of the world the epic
has been inhabiting for a hundred thousand verses. Accumulations end. Heights
end. Meetings end. Life ends. The Pandavas' great journey ends in the falling
of each one of them before the final destination, which is itself not an
arrival but a dissolution: Yudhishthira in heaven, the others revealed to be
there too after the final test, all of it temporary and all of it the working
out of what they were and what they chose.
The Final Test:
Hell and Its Revelation
The episode in which Yudhishthira finds
the Kauravas in pleasant heavenly realms while the Pandavas appear to be in
hell is the Mahabharata's final and most concentrated moral test. Yudhishthira
is told by the divine messenger that the Kauravas are here because they died in
battle, which is a warrior's good death, and that the Pandavas must experience
a period of suffering for the various adharmic acts performed during the war.
Yudhishthira refuses to leave the Pandavas and remains with them in what
appears to be hell.
This moment is the final expression
of the quality the Yaksha Prashna identified years earlier: Yudhishthira's
unwillingness to abandon those who are suffering in order to secure his own
comfort. He refused heaven at the dog's expense. He refuses it again at his
family's expense. This consistency is the tradition's portrait of what genuine
dharmic character looks like: not the performance of virtue in easy
circumstances but the maintenance of it at the highest personal cost, when the
alternative of comfortable self-interest is immediately available.
न जातु काम: कामानामुपभोगेन शाम्यति। हविषा कृष्णवर्त्मेव भूय एवाभिवर्धते॥
Na jatu kamah
kamanam upabhogena shamyati, Havisha krishna-vartmeva bhuya evabhivardhate.
(Desire is never
satisfied by enjoyment of desired objects, just as fire is not extinguished but
only grows when fed with oblations.)
Mahabharata, Adi
Parva, 85.12
The fire of desire grows when fed.
The Mahabharata ends with a figure who has been through everything the fire can
produce and who, at the end of it, chooses to stay with the suffering rather
than accept the comfort that is immediately available. This is not asceticism.
It is the natural expression of a character that has been formed, over a
lifetime of suffering and choice, into the thing that dharma was always trying
to produce: a person for whom the suffering of others is not an abstraction but
a reality that generates genuine loyalty and genuine presence.
Vyasa's Address:
What the Text Finally Says
The Mahabharata closes with Vyasa's
direct address to its reader, in which he says something that has the quality
of a man who has told the truth, all of it, and knows it was not enough and was
still necessary. He says that with both arms raised he cries out that no one
listens: dharma produces artha and kama. Why does no one follow it? He has told
the story of what happens when dharma is violated. He has told it in a hundred
thousand verses. The story is complete. And the question remains.
This is why the Mahabharata ends in
silence: not because it has nothing left to say but because it has said
everything and the saying was not sufficient. The text knows this. Vyasa knows
this. The silence at the end is not the silence of completion but the silence
of the person who has spoken their whole truth and waits to see if it has been
heard. The Mahabharata has been asking this question of its readers for two
thousand years. The silence after the last verse is the space in which that
question waits for its answer.
ऊर्ध्वबाहुर्विरौम्येष न च कश्चिच्छृणोति मे। धर्मादर्थश्च कामश्च स किमर्थं न सेव्यते॥
Urdhvabahur
viroumyesha na ca kashcic chrinoti me, Dharmadartha shca kamash ca sa kimartham
na sevyate.
(With arms raised
I cry out, yet no one heeds me: from dharma come both artha and kama. Why then
is dharma not pursued?)
Mahabharata,
Svargarohana Parva, 5.62
With arms raised. The image is of
someone calling out in a crowd that is not listening, or into a silence that
simply continues. Vyasa has told the whole story. He has shown what happens
when dharma is followed and what happens when it is not. He has spared nothing
and no one. And he ends by noting, with a quality that could be despair or
could be the deepest possible realism, that people still do not follow dharma
even knowing what it produces and what its absence produces. The question hangs
in the air. The text ends. The silence that follows is not empty. It is full of
everything the text could not finally say because the saying of it, however
complete, cannot substitute for the living of it.
Conclusion
The Mahabharata ends in silence
because the story it has told is too large for any conclusion to contain. It
has described the full range of human experience: love and betrayal, wisdom and
folly, courage and cowardice, the heights of dharmic achievement and the depths
of adharmic collapse. It has shown what it costs to live rightly in a world
that does not reward righteousness consistently. It has shown what happens to
those who live wrongly. And it ends not with a summary but with a question: why
does no one follow dharma?
The tradition calls this text the
fifth Veda, and it says of it that what is here is elsewhere and what is not
here is nowhere. Both claims are about completeness: the text contains
everything of human significance, and if something of human significance is not
here, it does not exist. The ending in silence is the silence of that
completeness. Everything has been said. The rest is up to the reader. The
Mahabharata, having done its work, raises its arms and waits.
References and
Suggested Reading
Mahabharata, Svargarohana Parva
(final parva)
Mahabharata, Stri Parva
Iravati Karve, Yuganta: The End of
an Epoch (1969)
Bibek Debroy, The Mahabharata
(Complete Translation)
Devdutt Pattanaik, Jaya: An
Illustrated Retelling of the Mahabharata (2010)
S. Radhakrishnan, The Hindu View of
Life (1927)
Alf Hiltebeitel, Dharma: Its Early
History in Law, Religion, and Narrative (2011)




