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FILE INFO | Caption | King Prithu, who was a great devotee of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, was performing one-hundred horse sacrifices. By the proper pronunciation of the vedic mantras chanted during the sacrifice, the sacrificial animals were not killed, but would come out with a new life. Indra became very envious of Prithu, fearing that he would excel him. As Prithu began the last of the one-hundred sacrifices, Indra made himself invisible and stole the horse meant for the sacrifice. Then, he dressed himself in saffron robes to appear as a liberated person. The son of King Prithu went after him, but seeing his dress as a sannyasi, he refrained from shooting him with his arrows, thinking him to be religious man. -Taken from Srimad Bhagavatam 4.19.2-14
Painted in 1995. | Headline | Indra Steals the Horse | Copyright Notice | © Copyright The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust International, Inc. All rights reserved. Click here for rights and permissions information. Art gallery maintained by Krishna.com. | Artists | Dinabandhu Dasa | Buy Now | Please browse the Krishna.com Store for art prints and posters. If you have special requests for art, please visit this page for more information. |
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