latter, Drona’s son, although he obtained the
opportunity to do his enemy the crowning evil, still
slew him not, from desire of battling with him for
some time more. Meanwhile Karna rushed against
the large elephant force of the Pandavas and began
to rout and destroy it. Depriving car-warriors
of their cars, he struck elephants and steeds and
human warriors, O Bharata, with innumerable straight
shafts. That mighty bowman, the son of Drona,
although he had made Pandya, that slayer of foes and
foremost of car-warriors, carless, yet he did not slay
him from desire of fight. At that time a huge
riderless elephant with large tusks, well-equipped
with all utensils of war, treading with speed, endued
with great might, quick to proceed against any enemy,
struck with Ashvatthama’s shafts, advanced towards
the direction of Pandya with great impetuosity, roaring
against a hostile compeer. Beholding that prince
of elephants, looking like a cloven mountain summit,
Pandya, who was well acquainted with the method of
fighting from the neck of an elephant, quickly ascended
that beast like a lion springing with a loud roar to
the top of a mountain summit. Then that lord
of the prince of mountains, striking the elephant
with the hook, and inspired with rage, and with that
cool care for which he was distinguished in hurling
weapons with great force, quickly sped a lance, bright
as Surya’s rays, at the preceptor’s son
and uttered a loud shout. Repeatedly shouting
in joy, “Thou art slain, Thou art slain!”
Pandya (with that lance) crushed to pieces the diadem
of Drona’s son adorned with foremost of jewels
and diamonds of the first water and the very best
kind of gold and excellent cloth and strings of pearls.
That diadem possessed of the splendour of the Sun,
the Moon, the planets, or the fire, in consequence
of the violence of the stroke, fell down, split into
fragments, like a mountain summit riven by Indra’s
thunder, falling down on the Earth with great noise.
At this, Ashvatthama blazed up with exceeding rage
like a prince of snakes struck with the foot, and
took up four and ten shafts capable of inflicting
great pain upon foes and each resembling the Destroyer’s
rod. With five of those shafts he cut off the
four feet and the trunk of his adversary’s elephant,
and with three the two arms and the head of the king,
and with six he slew the six mighty car-warriors, endued
with great effulgence, that followed king Pandya.
Those long and well-rounded arms of the king, smeared
with excellent sandal-paste, and adorned with gold
and pearls and gems and diamonds falling upon the Earth,
began to writhe like a couple of snakes slain by Garuda.
That head also, graced with a face bright as the full
Moon, having a prominent nose and a pair of large
eyes, red as copper with rage, adorned with earrings,
falling on the ground, looked resplendent like the
Moon himself between two bright constellations.
The elephant, thus cut off by that skilful warrior
into six pieces with those five shafts and the king