Adhiratha S
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 20 Feb 2010 04:55 and updated at 11 Mar 2010 18:27
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
MAHABHARATA NOUN
See All Nouns, See All Categories
Mbh.3.308.15071 | And not knowing his intention, Adhiratha's son addressed the Brahmana, saying, Of a necklace of gold, and beauteous damsels, and villages with plenty of kine, which shall I give thee' |
Mbh.7.2.55 | SECTION II Sanjaya said, Then Adhiratha's son of the Suta caste, knowing that Bhishma had been slain, became desirous of rescuing, like a brother, thy son's army from the distress into which it had fallen, and which then resembled a boat sunk in the fathomless ocean. |
Mbh.7.3.110 | Adhiratha's son Karna alighted from his car, in great affliction, filled with grief, and almost senseless. |
Mbh.7.30.1608 | Hearing that din made by the Kurus, desirous of protection, Adhiratha's son Karna, loudly assuring the troops with the words Do not fear' proceeded to face Arjuna. |
Mbh.7.30.1611 | And similarly, Adhiratha's son also baffled the shafts of Arjuna of supreme energy. |
Mbh.7.102.4731 | The standard of Adhiratha's son bore the mark of an elephant-rope made of gold. |
Mbh.7.129.6447 | Beholding Adhiratha's son excited with rage, thy sons, O king, regarded Bhimasena to be already poured as a libation on the Karna fire. |
Mbh.7.129.6457 | Adhiratha's son, however, smiling the while, quickly baffled, by means of his own winged arrows whetted on stone, that arrowy downpour of Bhimasena. |
Mbh.7.131.6539 | Indeed, like Indra slaying the Asuras with his thunderbolt, that hero of Bharata's race, excited with wrath, slew with that mace the well-trained steeds of the foremost breed, of Adhiratha's son. |
Mbh.7.132.6606 | The prowess that we then beheld of Bhimasena was exceedingly wonderful, inasmuch as, resisting Adhiratha's son the while, he slew those sons of thine. |
Mbh.7.133.6610 | And Adhiratha's son regarded himself guilty, seeing thy sons slain before his eyes in battle by Bhima. |
Mbh.7.134.6660 | So numerous were the shafts shot by Adhiratha's son that, these seemed to issue not from his bow alone but from his standard, his umbrella, and the shaft and yoke and bottom of his car also. |
Mbh.7.134.6661 | Indeed, Adhiratha's son shot his sky-ranging shafts of impetuous energy, decked with gold and equipped with vulturine feathers, in such a way as to fill the entire welkin with them. |
Mbh.7.134.6664 | The son of Pandu then counteracting that arrowy downpour of Adhiratha's son, pierced Karna himself with twenty other sharp shafts. |
Mbh.7.135.6731 | As a blazing conflagration, having the wind for its ally, courses through an extended heap of dry grass, even so, Adhiratha's son, engaged with Bhima, coursed fiercely in that battle |
Mbh.7.136.6761 | Indeed, the shafts shot from the bow of Adhiratha's son, looked like rows of cranes in the sky. |
Mbh.7.136.6762 | The arrows that Adhiratha's son shot were all equipped with vulturine feathers, whetted on stone, decked with gold, endued with great impetuosity, and furnished with blazing points. |
Mbh.7.136.6764 | The arrows shot from the bow of Adhiratha's son, as they coursed through the welkin, looked like one long continuously drawn arrow in the sky. |
Mbh.7.136.6788 | Then the mighty-armed and heroic Bhima, excited with rage, shot at Adhiratha's son an arrow resembling the rod of Yama or Death himself. |
Mbh.7.136.6804 | Then Adhiratha's son, excited with rage in that battle, smilingly took up another bow destructive of foes, having a stronger string, and tougher than the one he had lost. |
Mbh.7.144.7520 | And with his keen shafts, he slew the four steeds, white in hue, of Adhiratha's son. |
Mbh.7.186.10213 | Then taking up a heavy mace, once more, Bhima hurled it at Adhiratha's son. |
Mbh.8.32.1503 | Knowing me, O monarch, to be so capable, of afflicting the foe, why dost thou appoint me to the office of driver in battle for such a low-born person as Adhiratha's son? |
Mbh.8.46.2543 | Beholding that advancing car of wonderful aspect, Shalya once more said unto Adhiratha's son, that warrior of great energy in battle, these words Yonder comes that car having white steeds yoked unto it and owning Krishna for its driver, that vehicle incapable of being resisted by all the troops, like the inevitable fruit of work. |
Mbh.8.50.2825 | Having said these words, the mighty-armed Bhima proceeded towards Adhiratha's son, making all the points of the compass resound with a loud leonine shout. |
Mbh.8.51.2935 | Beholding the son of Subala, and Kritavarma, and Drona's son, and Adhiratha's son, and Kripa, engaged with the Pandavas, the Kauravas rallied and came back to the fight. |
Mbh.8.56.3190 | Filled with rage, the son of Radha then slew Jishnu, and Jishnukarman, and Devapi, O king, in that battle, and Citra, and Citrayudha, and Hari, and Singhaketu and Rochamana and the great car-warrior Salabha, and many car-warriors among the Cedis bathed the form of Adhiratha's son in blood, while he himself was engaged in taking the lives of those heroes. |
Mbh.8.73.4452 | Let the lofty standard of Adhiratha's son, bearing the device of the elephant's rope, fall fluttering on the earth, cut off by thee with a broad-headed arrow. |
Mbh.8.73.4454 | Let thy enemy Suyodhana today, beholding Adhiratha's son slain by thee, despair of both his life and kingdom. |
Mbh.8.73.4463 | They have never turned their faces from battle, afraid of Adhiratha's son. |
Mbh.8.81.4993 | Bending his formidable bow, Adhiratha's son Vrisha once more rushed against the Pancalas, in the very sight of Savyasaci. |
Mbh.8.82.5013 | Thus addressed the mighty-armed Arjuna, that foremost of men, smiled and then proceeded on his car towards the car of Adhiratha's son desirous, on that occasion of terror, of rescuing the Pancalas slaughtered by Karna, that leader of car-warriors. |
Mbh.8.88.5397 | After that fierce and awful battle had commenced between Dhananjaya and Adhiratha's son, each of those two heroes, clad in excellent mail, shrouded the ten points of the compass and the host opposed to him with keen and straight arrows. |
Mbh.8.89.5463 | Those two heroes endued with great impetuosity, Dhananjaya and Adhiratha's son, closed with each other like two infuriated Himalayan elephants, both of full-grown tusks, fighting with each other for the sake of a she-elephant in her season. |
Mbh.8.89.5563 | As the two heroes, O king, struck each other with many foremost of arrows, O king, the sounds caused by the bows, bow-strings, and palms, of both Dhananjaya and Adhiratha's son, became tremendous and their well-sped arrows also caused a deafening whizz. |
Mbh.8.89.5578 | Then quickly bending his bow-string and baffling all those shafts of Adhiratha's son, Partha, filled with rage in consequence of his limbs having been mangled with Karna's arrows, assailed the Kauravas. |
Mbh.8.90.5722 | Pierced with those arrows equipped with heads like the calf's tooth, Adhiratha's son of broad chest looked resplendent like an Asoka or Palasa or Salmali decked with its flowery load or a mountain overgrown with a forest of sandal trees. |
Mbh.8.90.5725 | Shafts, however, of keen points, sped from Arjuna's arms, encountering in the welkin the blazing arrows, resembling mighty snakes, sped from the arms of Adhiratha's son, destroyed them all. |
Mbh.8.91.5839 | The diadem-decked Arjuna, with that razor-headed shaft, exceedingly sharp, equipped with wings of gold, possessed of the splendour of fire when fed with libations of clarified butter, and blazing with beauty, cut off that standard of Adhiratha's son, that great car-warrior. |
Mbh.8.94.6000 | The earth has become impassable with heaps of slain men and steeds and elephants, and with cars broken with the shafts of Dhananjaya and Adhiratha's son and with the numberless shafts themselves shot by them. |
Mbh.8.94.6023 | The foremost of Kuru heroes also, having beheld that wonderful battle between Dhananjaya and Adhiratha's son, which had inspired all living creatures with dread, proceeded to their nightly quarters, filled with wonder and applauding the encounter. |
Mbh.8.96.6158 | He that reads of this great battle, which is like unto a sacrifice, between the high-souled Dhananjaya and Adhiratha's son, so also he that hears the account of this battle read, both obtain, O Bharata, the fruit of a great sacrifice duly performed. |
Jijith Nadumuri Ravi
Research data published for the interest of people researching on Mahabharata.
Suggestions are welcome: email:moc.liamg|rnhtijij#moc.liamg|rnhtijij
Reference:- Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa, translated to English by Kisari Mohan Ganguli; Source of Plain Text: www.sacred-texts.com; Wikified at AncientVoice. |
Share:-