"Then is recited the wonderful Parva called Drona, full of incidents. First comes the installation in the command of the army of the great instructor in arms, Drona; then the vow made by that great master of weapons of seizing the wise Yudhish-thira in battle to please Duryodhana; then the retreat of Arjuna from the field before the Sansaptakas; then the overthrow of Bhagadatta like to a second Indra in the field, with his elephant Supritika, by Arjuna; then the death of the hero Abhimanyu in his teens, alone and unsupported, at the hands of many Maharathas including Jayadratha; then after the death of Abhimanyu, the destruction by Arjuna in battle of seven Akshauhinis of troops and then of Jayadratha; then the entry, by Bhima of mighty arms and by that foremost of charioteers Sātyaki, into the Kaurava ranks impenetrable to even the gods, in search after Arjuna in obedience to the orders of Yudhish-thira, and the destruction of the remnant of the Sansaptakas. In the Drona Parva, is the death of Alamvusha, of Srutayus, of Jalasandha, of Shoma-datti, of Virata, of the great charioteer Drupada, of Ghatotkacha, and others; in this Parva, Aswatthama, excited beyond measure at the fall of his father in battle, discharged the terrible weapon Narayana. Then the glory of Rudra in connection with the burning (of the three cities). Then the arrival of Vyasa and recital by him of the glory of Krishna and Arjuna. This is the great seventh Parva of the Bharata in which all the heroic chiefs and princes mentioned were sent to their last account. The number of sections in this is one hundred and seventy. The number of slokas as composed in the Drona Parva by Rishi Vyasa the son of Parasara and the possessor of true knowledge, after much meditation, is eight thousand nine hundred and nine.
"Then comes the most wonderful Parva called Karna. In this is narrated the appointment of the wise king of Madra as (Karna's) charioteer. Then the history of the fall of the Asura Tripura. Then the application to each other by Karna and Salya of harsh words on their setting out for the field. Then the story of the swan and the crow recited in insulting allusion; then the death of Pandya at the hands of the high-souled Aswatthama; then the death of Danda-sena; then