Vyasa

Arjuna and Draupadi

41 substories where their stories intersect

41 shared moments across the Mahabharata.

Major

Chapter 227

Krishna Takes Leave of the Pandavas and Returns to Dvaraka

After a happy stay in Khandavaprastha, Krishna decides to return to Dvaraka to see his father. He takes formal and affectionate leave from each of the Pandavas, Kunti, and Draupadi, performing all the proper rituals before his departure. The Pandavas escort him out, their hearts unsatisfied, watching until his chariot disappears from sight.

Pivotal

Chapter 267

Kings depart after the completed Rajasuya sacrifice

The Rajasuya sacrifice, protected by Krishna, is complete. The kshatriya kings who attended now seek Yudhishthira's leave to return home. Yudhishthira honors them and orders his brothers and allies to conduct each king and his retinue safely to the borders of his kingdom.

Pivotal

Chapter 283

Yudhishthira Gambles Away His Riches, Brothers, Self, and Draupadi

Shakuni has already won Yudhishthira's wealth. He asks if the Pandava has anything left to gamble. Compelled by the game, Yudhishthira begins to stake what remains: his kingdom, his brothers, himself, and finally his wife Draupadi. Each time, Shakuni casts the dice and declares victory.

Minor

Chapter 286

Bhima Rages at Yudhishthira for Staking Draupadi

After losing everything in the dice game, Bhima’s rage finally ignites — not over the lost kingdom or their own freedom, but because Yudhishthira staked their wife. He orders Sahadeva to bring fire to burn the king’s hands.

Supporting

Chapter 286

Karna Declares Draupadi a Courtesan and Orders Disrobing

Enraged by Vikarna’s defense and the assembly’s approval, Karna delivers a brutal rebuttal. He declares Draupadi lawfully won and, because she has five husbands, a courtesan. He orders Duhshasana to strip the Pandavas and Draupadi.

Major

Chapter 288

Dhritarashtra intervenes and grants Draupadi two boons

Ominous sounds portend disaster. Warned by Vidura and Gandhari, Dhritarashtra rebukes Duryodhana and offers Draupadi boons to pacify the crisis. She asks first for Yudhishthira's freedom, then for the freedom of the other four Pandavas with their weapons, refusing a third boon as a matter of dharma.

Supporting

Chapter 293

Duhshasana Mocks the Defeated Pandavas and Draupadi

As the defeated Pandavas dress in deerskins for exile, Duhshasana publicly taunts them for their poverty and urges Draupadi to abandon her impotent husbands and choose a new one from among the prosperous Kurus.

Major

Chapter 294

Vidura advises the Pandavas and gives them leave to depart

As the Pandavas prepare to walk into the forest, Vidura intervenes. He offers sanctuary to their aged mother, Kunti, then delivers a fierce, poetic exhortation: reminding the brothers of their unique strengths, their divine teachers, and the elemental virtues they must embody to survive and return victorious.

Supporting

Chapter 296

Vidura describes the Pandavas' departure for exile

Dhritarashtra, blind and anxious, asks Vidura to describe how the Pandavas are leaving for the forest. Vidura details each brother's and Draupadi's symbolic gesture, translating their silent actions into a forecast of future war and vengeance.

Supporting

Chapter 297

Dhritarashtra confesses his grief and guilt to Sanjaya

With the Pandavas gone to the forest, Dhritarashtra sits in his palace, consumed by a grief that puzzles his charioteer Sanjaya. The blind king then lays bare the full horror of what happened in the assembly hall — the disrobing, the omens, the warnings he ignored — and admits that his own love for his son has doomed them all.

Supporting

Chapter 301

Yudhishthira Feeds Brahmanas and Departs for Kamyaka

Having received the Sun's boon, Yudhishthira arises from the water and returns to his family. He cooks the forest fare himself — and it multiplies, becoming inexhaustible. He feeds the brahmanas first, then his brothers, then eats the remainder with Draupadi. Blessed and provisioned, the Pandavas set out for Kamyaka forest.

Supporting

Chapter 309

Vidura Narrates the Pandavas' Encounter with Kirmira

Vidura recounts how the exiled Pandavas entered the Kamyaka forest at midnight, when rakshasas roam. They are confronted by Kirmira, brother of Baka and friend of Hidimba, who vows to avenge them both. Bhima fights him with a tree, then with his bare hands, and kills the rakshasa, freeing the forest of his terror.

Major

Chapter 310

Draupadi Laments Her Sufferings to Krishna

Draupadi approaches Krishna and begins to recount everything — the poisoning of Bhima, the burning of the lac house, the killing of Hidimba and Baka, her own svayamvara. She censures the Pandavas for tolerating her molestation, names each of her five sons, and declares that her grief over Karna's laughter will never be pacified.

Minor

Chapter 310

Krishna Reveals the Nara-Narayana Identity

After Arjuna's recitation, Krishna speaks directly to him. He declares that they are the rishis Nara and Narayana, that they are identical — "You are mine and I am yours" — and that no difference exists between them. The kings become agitated at this revelation, and Draupadi approaches to seek refuge.

Pivotal

Chapter 321

Pandavas Depart from Hastinapura into Exile

Krishna Vasudeva has left. The dice game is over. Yudhishthira, his brothers, and Draupadi prepare to leave Hastinapura for the forest — not as defeated men, but as warriors ascending expensive chariots. The citizens of Kurujangala gather around them, weeping, asking why their king would abandon them. Arjuna answers: the king will go to the forest to rob his enemies of their fame.

Major

Chapter 323

Markandeya Visits the Pandavas in Exile

While living in exile along the Sarasvati, the Pandavas receive a visit from the ancient rishi Markandeya. When Yudhishthira notices the sage smiling, he asks why — and receives a discourse on dharma that spans the ages, from Rama to the elephants of the forest.

Pivotal

Chapter 325

Draupadi Grieves and Incites Yudhishthira to Anger

Seated in the forest with her husbands, Draupadi watches them suffer in silence while Duryodhana celebrates in the city. She turns to Yudhishthira and begins to speak — not to console, but to question why a king who can destroy his enemies feels no anger at seeing his brothers and his wife reduced to rags and mud.

Major

Chapter 333

Bhimasena Urges Yudhishthira to Wage War Immediately

Yudhishthira has made an agreement with time itself — to wait out the thirteen-year exile before reclaiming his kingdom. But Bhimasena sees this as fatalism dressed as patience. Life shortens with every breath, he argues; death approaches each instant. For a kshatriya, there is no dharma other than fighting. He urges his brother to wage war now, before the waiting consumes them.

Supporting

Chapter 343

Sanjaya Confirms Dhritarashtra's Fears

Dhritarashtra finishes his lament. Sanjaya confirms everything the king said is true — then recounts the causes of the Pandavas' wrath: Draupadi brought into the assembly hall, Duhshasana's and Karna's terrible words, Arjuna's encounter with Sthanu in the hunter's disguise, and Bhima's vow to smash Duryodhana's thighs. The Parthas, he concludes, are invincible even to the gods.

Supporting

Chapter 344

Pandavas Sustain Themselves in Kamyaka Forest

King Dhritarashtra’s lamentations after sending the Pandavas into exile served no purpose — he had already agreed with his son Duryodhana. Janamejaya asks how the exiled princes survived in the forest: what they ate, how they sustained themselves. The answer reveals a kingdom in miniature, maintained by Yudhishthira’s generosity and Draupadi’s discipline.

Major

Chapter 345

Sanjaya Reports Krishna's Visit to Kamyaka

Sanjaya reports to Dhritarashtra that after the Pandavas' defeat at dice, Krishna and their allies visited them in Kamyaka forest. Krishna vowed to kill Duryodhana and his allies, but Yudhishthira insisted on keeping his thirteen-year vow. The assembled warriors then pledged to Draupadi that her oppressors would be destroyed when the time came.

Minor

Chapter 376

Draupadi and Brothers Lament Arjuna's Absence

In Kamyaka forest, Draupadi tells the Pandavas that the world feels empty without Arjuna. One by one, each brother speaks — remembering his feats, his strength, the horses he won, the bride he abducted — and confesses that without him, the forest has lost all charm.

Minor

Chapter 376

Pandavas Lament Arjuna's Departure from Kamyaka

Janamejaya asks how his ancestors lived in the forest after Arjuna left. Vaishampayana describes the Pandavas' joyless existence — they perform sacrifices, collect forest fare for brahmanas, and live anxious and unhappy, like jewels fallen from a broken string.

Supporting

Chapter 416

Balarama Laments the Pandavas' Suffering

The Vrishnis welcome the Pandavas at Prabhasa, and Balarama sees Yudhishthira — a king who followed dharma — miserable in the forest while Duryodhana prospers. The sight creates a moral paradox he cannot resolve, and he turns to Krishna with a speech that catalogues every injustice and ends with a question the earth itself seems unwilling to answer.

Supporting

Chapter 417

Krishna Advises Yudhishthira on Dharma and War

Krishna assures Yudhishthira that his allies will stand with him against Duryodhana — but warns that Yudhishthira will never accept a kingdom won by anyone else's strength. Yudhishthira responds by affirming that he must protect his truth more than his kingdom, and that when the time comes, Krishna himself will vanquish Duryodhana in battle.

Supporting

Chapter 438

Pandavas Visit Subahu and Enter the Himalayas

Having resolved their course, the Pandavas arrive at the prosperous kingdom of Subahu, lord of the kunindas. They are welcomed, hosted, and then — leaving their servants and retinue behind — they set out on foot toward the Himalayas, driven by the single hope of seeing Arjuna.

Supporting

Chapter 452

Yudhishthira Decides to Journey to Gandhamadana

Four years of forest exile have passed. Yudhishthira remembers Arjuna's promise to return in the fifth year to the white-topped mountain peak. He assembles his brothers and Draupadi, announces the plan to go to Gandhamadana to meet Arjuna, and consults the brahmanas and ascetics, who approve the journey and bless it.

Pivotal

Chapter 458

Arjuna Returns to Gandhamadana in Indra's Chariot

While the Pandavas are thinking of Arjuna, Indra's chariot driven by Matali suddenly appears in the sky, carrying Arjuna. He descends, pays respects to Dhoumya, Yudhishthira, Bhima, and Draupadi, is worshipped by Nakula and Sahadeva, and the Pandavas honor Matali before he departs. Arjuna presents the gifts from Indra, recounts his acquisition of weapons from Indra, Vayu, and Shiva, and his entry into heaven, then happily goes to sleep with his brothers.

Minor

Chapter 458

Pandavas Wait for Arjuna on Gandhamadana

The Pandavas, having established themselves on Mount Gandhamadana, are waiting for Arjuna to return from obtaining divine weapons from Indra. They live on the mountain, performing austerities, rituals, and yoga, while constantly thinking of Arjuna and counting every day and night as a year in his absence. A month passes in melancholy; the Pandavas remain in grief-stricken waiting, their happiness absent since Arjuna left Kamyaka forest.

Supporting

Chapter 473

Yudhishthira Sees Omens and Goes to Find Bhima

Yudhishthira sees terrible omens — a blazing sky, a howling she-jackal, a deformed quail vomiting blood — and his own body trembles with foreboding. When he asks where Bhima is, Draupadi tells him his brother has been gone a long time. He follows the trail of broken trees to a mountainous cavern, where he finds Bhima immobile in a serpent's grasp.

Supporting

Chapter 477

Krishna Visits the Pandavas in Kamyaka

The Pandavas have settled in the Kamyaka forest, surrounded by sages, when a brahmana announces that Krishna and the ancient sage Markandeya are coming to see them. Krishna arrives on his chariot with Satyabhama, embraces Arjuna repeatedly, and hears the full account of their forest exile.

Supporting

Chapter 477

Markandeya and Narada Arrive at Kamyaka

While Krishna and Yudhishthira converse, the ancient sage Markandeya arrives — aged through thousands of years of austerities. The Pandavas and brahmanas worship him, and Krishna asks him to narrate sacred accounts of the past. Narada also arrives, approves the proposal, and Markandeya asks for time to prepare.

Supporting

Chapter 522

Brahmana Visitor Reports Pandavas' Suffering

A brahmana skilled in storytelling visits the Pandavas in their forest exile, then travels to Dhritarashtra's court. When the aged king asks for news, the brahmana describes what he has seen — the princes emaciated by wind and sun, Draupadi suffering as though unprotected despite her husbands' presence — and Dhritarashtra is flooded with compassion.

Supporting

Chapter 522

Dhritarashtra Laments the Pandavas' Suffering

Dhritarashtra, hearing the brahmana's report, is overcome with grief and self-reproach. He describes each Pandava's suffering in detail — Yudhishthira sleeping on bare ground, Bhima's restrained rage, Arjuna's sleepless anger, the twins' wretchedness — and reflects on the inevitability of destiny and the futility of deeds. His words are secretly overheard by Duryodhana, Shakuni, and Karna, who become disturbed and unhappy.

Pivotal

Chapter 547

Draupadi Answers Kotikashya's Question and Reveals Her Identity

Kotikashya, the foremost of the Shibis, arrives at the hermitage and asks a question — but finds only Draupadi there, alone in the forest. With no one else to reply, she must speak for herself, revealing who she is, naming her five husbands, and explaining where they have gone.

Pivotal

Chapter 549

Draupadi Threatens Jayadratha with Pandava Vengeance

Jayadratha dismisses Draupadi's warnings, insisting she cannot dissuade him with words alone. She declares she is not weak — that both Krishnas will follow her footsteps on a single chariot, that Indra himself cannot abduct her, and that she will see him bound and dragged by the sons of Pritha.

Supporting

Chapter 550

Pandavas Return from Hunt and Learn of Abduction

The Pandavas return from their hunt to find their hermitage empty and their maid weeping. A jackal howls on their left — an omen of disaster. When Indrasena questions the maid, she learns the truth: Jayadratha has abducted Draupadi while they were away, and the trail is still fresh.

Supporting

Chapter 550

Pandavas Pursue and Confront Jayadratha's Army

The Pandavas follow the fresh trail of Jayadratha's army, seeing the dust raised by the hooves of his horses. Dhoumya urges Bhima to attack. When they see Draupadi standing on Jayadratha's chariot, their rage flares — and they call out to the king of Sindhu to stop.

Supporting

Chapter 551

Jayadratha Asks Draupadi to Identify the Pandavas

Jayadratha, having abducted Draupadi, sees five chariots approaching and his courage drains away. He asks Draupadi to identify her husbands — and she does, describing each Pandava in detail, warning him of the doom that is about to descend upon him.

Supporting

Chapter 552

Jayadratha Flees and Draupadi Is Freed

Seeing his army destroyed, Jayadratha frees Draupadi and flees into the forest. Yudhishthira orders Nakula to pick her up, and Bhima wants to slaughter the remaining soldiers — but Arjuna stops him. Bhima vows to kill Jayadratha even if he escapes to the nether regions. Yudhishthira objects, citing Duhshala and Gandhari. But Draupadi, angry and unashamed, demands the wretch's death.

Minor

Chapter 553

Bhima Captures and Humiliates Jayadratha

Jayadratha, having been defeated by the Pandava brothers, flees for his life. But Bhima chases him down on foot, seizes him by the hair, thrashes him unconscious, kicks him in the head, and shaves his head into five tufts. He binds him and presents him as a slave to Yudhishthira — who, moved by compassion, orders him freed.