while the foot-soldiers began to fly in all directions.
And loud was the clatter made by Arjuna’s shafts
as they cleft the coats of mail belonging to mighty
warriors, made of steel, silver, and copper.
And the field was soon covered with the corpses of
warriors mounted on elephants and horses, all mangled
by the shafts of Partha of great impetuosity like
unto sighing snakes. And then it seemed as if
Dhananjaya, bow in hand, was dancing on the field of
battle. And sorely affrighted at the twang of
the Gandiva resembling the noise of the thunder, many
were the combatants that fled from that terrible conflict.
And the field of battle was bestrewn with severed heads
decked with turbans, ear-rings and necklaces of gold,
and the earth looked beautiful by being scattered
all over with human trunks mangled by shafts, and arms
having bows in their grasp and hands decked with ornaments.
And, O bull of the Bharata race, in consequence of
heads cut off by whetted shafts ceaselessly falling
on the ground, it seemed as if a shower of stones
fell from the sky. And that Partha of formidable
prowess, displaying his fierceness, now ranged the
field of battle, pouring the terrible fire of his
wrath upon the sons of Dhritarashtra. And beholding
the fierce prowess of Arjuna who thus scorched the
hostile host, the Kuru warriors, in the very presence
of Duryodhana, became dispirited and ceased to fight.
And, O Bharata, having struck terror into that host
and routed those mighty car-warriors, that fore-most
of victors, ranged on the field. And the son
of Pandu then created on the field of battle a dreadful
river of blood, with waving billows, like unto the
river of death that is created by Time at the end
of the Yuga, having the dishevelled hair of the dead
and the dying for its floating moss and straw, with
bows and arrows for its boats, fierce in the extreme
and having flesh and animal juices for its mire.
And coats of mail and turbans floated thick on its
surface. And elephants constituted its alligators
and the cars its rafts. And marrow and fat and
blood constituted its currents. And it was calculated
to strike terror into the hearts of the spectators.
And dreadful to behold, and fearful in the extreme,
and resounding with the yells of ferocious beasts,
keen edged weapons constituted its crocodiles.
And Rakshasas and other cannibals haunted it from
one end to the other. And strings of pearls constituted
its ripples, and various excellent ornaments, its bubbles.
And having swarms of arrows for its fierce eddies
and steeds for its tortoises, it was incapable of
being crossed. And the mighty car warrior constituted
its large island, and it resounded with the bleat of
conchs and the sound of drums. And the river
of blood that Partha created was incapable of being
crossed. Indeed, so swift-handed was Arjuna that
the spectators could not perceive any interval between
his taking up an arrow, and fixing it on the bow-string,
and letting it off by a stretch of the Gandiva.’”