The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 2,886 pages of information about The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3.

The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 2,886 pages of information about The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3.

“Sanjaya said, ’King Duryodhana, O monarch, himself fearlessly received Yudhishthira, as the latter was engaged in shooting large numbers of shafts.  The royal Yudhishthira the just, speedily piercing thy son, that mighty car-warrior, as the latter was rushing towards him with impetuosity, addressed him, saying, “Wait, Wait.”  Duryodhana, however, pierced Yudhishthira, in return, with nine keen arrows, and filled with great wrath, struck Yudhishthira’s driver also with a broad-headed shaft.  Then king Yudhishthira sped at Duryodhana three and ten arrows equipped with wings of gold and whetted on stone.  With four shafts that mighty car-warrior then slew the four steeds of his foe, and with the fifth he cut off from his trunk the head of Duryodhana’s driver.  With the sixth arrow he felled the (Kuru) king’s standard on the Earth, with the seventh his bow, and with the eighth his scimitar.  And then with five more shafts king Yudhishthira the just deeply afflicted the Kuru monarch.  Thy son, then, alighting from that steedless car, stood on the Earth in imminent danger.  Beholding him in that situation of great peril, Karna and Drona’s son and Kripa and others rushed suddenly towards the spot, desirous of rescuing the king.  Then the (other) sons of Pandu, surrounding Yudhishthira, all proceeded to the encounter, upon which, O king, a fierce battle was fought.  Thousands of trumpets then were blown in that great engagement, and a confused din of myriad voices arose there, O king.  There where the Pancalas engaged the Kauravas, in battle, men closed with men, and elephants with foremost of elephants.  And car-warriors closed with car-warriors, and horse with horse.  And the various couples of battling men and animals, of great prowess and armed with diverse kinds of weapons and possessed of great skill presented a beautiful sight, O king, over the field.  All those heroes endued with great impetuosity and desirous of compassing the destruction of one another, fought beautifully and with great activity and skill.  Observing the (sanctioned) practices of warriors, they slew one another in battle.  None of them fought from behind others.  For only a very short time that battle presented a beautiful aspect.  Soon it became an encounter of mad men, in which the combatants showed no regard for one another.  The car-warrior, approaching the elephant, pierced the latter with keen shafts and despatched it to Yama’s presence by means of straight arrows.  Elephants, approaching steeds, dragged down many of them in that battle, and tore them (with their tusks) most fiercely in diverse places.  Large numbers of horsemen also, encompassing many foremost of steeds, made a loud noise with their palms, and closed with them.  And those horsemen slew those steeds as they ran hither and thither, as also many huge elephants as these wandered over the field, from behind and the flanks.  Infuriate elephants, O king, routing large numbers of steeds, slew them with their tusks or crushed them

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The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.