Duhsasana
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 21 Feb 2010 17:44 and updated at 21 Feb 2010 17:44
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
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Mbh.1.1.137 | When I heard that the wicked wretch Duhsasana, was striving to strip her of that single garment, had only drawn from her person a large heap of cloth without being able to arrive at its end, then, O Sanjaya, I had no hope of success. |
Mbh.1.1.183 | When I heard that Bhimasena drank the blood of his brother Duhsasana in the field of battle without anybody being able to prevent him, then, O Sanjaya, I had no hope of success. |
Mbh.1.1.185 | When I heard that Yudhishthira, the Just, overcame the heroic son of Drona, Duhsasana, and the fierce Kritavarman, then, O Sanjaya, I had no hope of success. |
Mbh.1.61.2918 | When Duryodhana, with various means, both secret and open, found himself incapable of destroying the Pandavas who were protected by the fates and kept alive for grave future purposes such as the extermination of the Kuru race, then called together his counsellors consisting of Vrisha Karna, Duhsasana and others, and with the knowledge of Dhritarashtra caused a house of lac to be constructed. |
Mbh.1.63.3180 | And amongst those hundred and one, eleven, viz, Duhsasana, Duhsaha, Durmarshana, Vikarna, Chitrasena, Vivinsati, Jaya, Satyavrata, Purumitra, and Yuyutsu by a Vaisya wife, were all Maharathas great car-warriors. |
Mbh.1.67.3514 | Vaisampayana said, O king, they are as follows: Duryodhana, and Yuyutsu, and also Duhsasana; Duhsaha and Duhshala, and then Durmukha; Vivinsati, and Vikarna, Jalasandha, Sulochna, Vinda and Anuvinda, Durdharsha, Suvahu, Dushpradharshana; Durmarshana, and Dushkarna, and Karna; Chitra and Vipachitra, Chitraksha, Charuchitra, and Angada, Durmada, and Dushpradharsha, Vivitsu, Vikata, Sama; Urananabha, and Padmanabha, Nanda and Upanandaka; Sanapati, Sushena, Kundodara; Mahodara; Chitravahu, and Chitravarman, Suvarman, Durvirochana; Ayovahu, Mahavahu, Chitrachapa and Sukundala, Bhimavega, Bhimavala, Valaki, Bhimavikrama, Ugrayudha, Bhimaeara, Kanakayu, Dridhayudha, Dridhavarman, Dridhakshatra Somakirti, Anadara; Jarasandha, Dridhasandha, Satyasandha, Sahasravaeh; Ugrasravas, Ugrasena, and Kshemamurti; Aprajita, Panditaka, Visalaksha, Duradhara, Dridhahasta, and Suhasta, Vatavega, and Suvarchasa; Adityaketu, Vahvasin, Nagadatta and Anuyaina; Nishangi, Kuvachi, Dandi, Dandadhara, Dhanugraha; Ugra, Bhimaratha, Vira, Viravahu, Alolupa; Abhaya, and Raudrakarman, also he who was Dridharatha; Anadhrishya, Kundaveda, Viravi, Dhirghalochana; Dirghavahu; Mahavahu; Vyudhoru, Kanakangana; Kundaja and Chitraka. |
Mbh.1.95.5304 | They are Duryodhana, Duhsasana, Vikarna, and Chitrasena. |
Mbh.1.117.6299 | Vaisampayana said, Their names, O king, according to the order of birth, are Duryodhana, Yuyutsu, Duhsasana, Duhsaha, Duhsala, Jalasandha, Sama, Saha, Vinda and Anuvinda, Durdharsha, Suvahu, Dushpradharshana, Durmarshana and Durmukha, Dushkarna, and Karna; Vivinsati and Vikarna, Sala, Satwa, Sulochana, Chitra and Upachitra, Chitraksha, Charuchitra, Sarasana, Durmada and Durvigaha, Vivitsu, Vikatanana; Urnanabha and Sunabha, then Nandaka and Upanandaka; Chitravana, Chitravarman, Suvarman, Durvimochana; Ayovahu, Mahavahu, Chitranga, Chitrakundala, Bhimavega, Bhimavala, Balaki, Balavardhana, Ugrayudha; Bhima, Karna, Kanakaya, Dridhayudha, Dridhavarman, Dridhakshatra, Somakitri, Anudara; Dridhasandha, Jarasandha, Satyasandha, Sada, Suvak, Ugrasravas, Ugrasena, Senani, Dushparajaya, Aparajita, Kundasayin, Visalaksha, Duradhara; Dridhahasta, Suhasta, Vatavega, and Suvarchas; Adityaketu, Vahvashin, Nagadatta, Agrayayin; Kavachin, Krathana, Kunda, Kundadhara, Dhanurdhara; the heroes, Ugra and Bhimaratha, Viravahu, Alolupa; Abhaya, and Raudrakarman, and Dridharatha; Anadhrishya, Kundabhedin, Viravi, Dhirghalochana Pramatha, and Pramathi and the powerful Dhirgharoma; Dirghavahu, Mahavahu, Vyudhoru, Kanakadhvaja; Kundasi and Virajas. |
Mbh.1.140.7438 | And Duryodhana and Karna and the mighty Yuyutsu, and Duhsasana and Vikarna and Jalasandha and Sulochana, these and many other foremost of Kshatriya princes of great prowess, vied with one another in becoming the foremost in the attack. |
Mbh.1.140.7450 | Then Duryodhana and Vikarna, Suvahu and Dirghalochana and Duhsasana becoming furious, began to shower their arrows upon the enemy. |
Mbh.1.143.7716 | SECTION CXLIII Jatugriha Parva Vaisampayana said, Then the son of Suvala Sakuni, king Duryodhana, Duhsasana and Kama, in consultation with one another, formed an evil conspiracy. |
Mbh.1.144.7765 | Then Duryodhana and Karna, and Sakuni, the son of Suvala, and Duhsasana as their fourth, held a consultation together. |
Mbh.1.187.9418 | SECTION CLXXXVIII Swayamvara Parva continued Dhrishtadyumna said, Duryodhana, Durvisaha, Durmukha and Dushpradharshana, Vivinsati, Vikarna, Saha, and Duhsasana; Yuyutsu and Vayuvega and Bhimavegarava; Ugrayudha, Valaki, Kanakayu, and Virochana, Sukundala, Chitrasena, Suvarcha, and Kanakadhwaja; Nandaka, and Vahusali, and Tuhunda, and Vikata; these, O sister, and many other mighty sons of Dhritarashtra, all heroes, accompanied by Karna, have come for thy hand. |
Mbh.1.201.9969 | Then Duhsasana, blushing with shame, addressed his brother softly and said, If Arjuna had not disguised himself as a Brahmana, he could never have succeeded in obtaining Draupadi. |
Mbh.1.205.10120 | After the heroes will have been permitted by Drupada, to come hither, let Duhsasana and Vikarna go out with a handsome train to receive them. |
Mbh.4.21.859 | That we have been deprived of our kingdom, that I have not yet slain the Kurus, that I have not yet taken the heads of Suyodhana and Karna, and Suvala's son Sakuni, and the wicked Duhsasana, these acts and omissions, O lady, are consuming every limb of mine. |
Mbh.7.7.218 | And Kripa, and Kritavarman, and Chitrasena, and Vivinsati headed by Duhsasana, strove vigorously for protecting the left wing. |
Mbh.7.12.461 | Then king Duryodhana having consulted with Karna and Duhsasana and others, said unto the preceptor, that invincible warrior and foremost of all victors, these words, If thou wouldst give me a boon, then, seizing that foremost of car-warriors, viz, Yudhishthira, alive, bring him unto me here' |
Mbh.7.23.1199 | The son of Duhsasana resisted the mighty car-warrior Srutakirti, the son of Arjuna by Draupadi, as the latter was rushing towards Drona. |
Mbh.7.32.1709 | And the king was surrounded by the mighty car-warriors, Karna, Duhsasana, and Kripa, and had a white umbrella held over his head. |
Mbh.7.35.1825 | And Duhsasana pierced him with a dozen; and Saradwata's son Kripa, with three. |
Mbh.7.37.1891 | Indeed, Duryodhana said unto Karna and king Valhika and Duhsasana and the ruler of the Madras and the many other mighty car-warriors of his army, these words, The preceptor of the entire order of the Kshatriyas, he that is the foremost of all conversant with Brahma, doth not, from stupefaction, wish to slay this son of Arjuna. |
Mbh.7.37.1902 | Duhsasana, in particular, that tiger among the Kurus, hearing those words of Duryodhana, answered the latter, saying, O monarch, I tell thee that even I will slay this one in the very sight of the Pandavas and before the eyes of the Panchalas. |
Mbh.7.37.1904 | And once more addressing the Kuru king loudly, Duhsasana said, Hearing that Subhadra's son hath been slain by me, the two Krishnas, who are exceedingly vain, will without doubt, go to the region of the departed spirits, leaving this world of men. |
Mbh.7.37.1908 | Having said these words, O king, thy son Duhsasana, filled with rage and uttering a loud roar, rushed against the son of Subhadra and covered him with showers of arrows. |
Mbh.7.37.1910 | Duhsasana, however, filled with rage, and looking like an infuriated elephant, fought desperately with Abhimanyu, the son of Subhadra in that battle. |
Mbh.7.38.1913 | SECTION XXXVIII Sanjaya said, Then the intelligent Abhimanyu, with limbs mangled with arrows, smilingly addressed his foe, Duhsasana, stationed before him saying, By good luck it is that I behold in battle that vain hero arrived before me, who is cruel, who hath cast away all righteousness, and who brawleth out lustily his own praises. |
Mbh.7.38.1924 | Having said these words, that mighty-armed warrior, that slayer of hostile heroes, aimed a shaft endued with the splendour of Yama or of Agni or of the Wind-god, capable of despatching Duhsasana to the other world. |
Mbh.7.38.1926 | And soon Abhimanyu once more struck him with five and twenty arrows whose touch resembled that of fire, and which were sped from his bow drawn to its fullest stretch, Deeply pierced and greatly pained, Duhsasana, sat down on the terrace of his car and was, O king, overtaken by a swoon. |
Mbh.7.38.1927 | Afflicted thus by the arrows of Subhadra's son and deprived of his senses, Duhsasana. |
Mbh.7.38.1935 | During the progress of that dreadful encounter, Duryodhana, O monarch, addressing the son of Radha, said, Behold, the heroic Duhsasana, who resembleth the scorching sun who was hitherto slaying the foe in battle, hath at last himself succumbed to Abhimanyu. |
Mbh.7.46.2163 | Then the son of Duhsasana pierced the four steeds of Abhimanyu with four shafts, his charioteer with one and Abhimanyu himself with ten. |
Mbh.7.49.2282 | Encountering our implacable foe Duhsasana in battle, he with his arrows, caused that warrior to fly away from the field, deprived of his senses. |
Mbh.7.49.2283 | Alas, the heroic son of Arjuna, having crossed the vast sea of Drona's army, was ultimately obliged to become a guest of Yama's abode, upon encountering the son of Duhsasana. |
Mbh.7.83.3674 | Seized by Death himself, that wicked-souled son of mine, rejecting my counsels, adopted those of Duhsasana and Karna. |
Mbh.7.83.3695 | Who else, again, is there, save Duryodhana, and Karna, and Sakuni, the son of Suvala, and Duhsasana as their fourth, for I do not see the fifth that would venture to resist my foes while the latter display their celestial weapons? |
Mbh.7.83.3707 | What also did Duhsasana and Suvala's son do? |
Mbh.7.85.3768 | Thy two other sons, viz, Duhsasana and Vikarna, took up their position amid the advance-divisions of the army, for the accomplishment of the objects of Jayadratha. |
Mbh.7.87.3848 | Then, thy son Duhsasana, O king, beholding that state of the troops, became filled with wrath and rushed against Arjuna for battle. |
Mbh.7.87.3874 | Their leader himself was in great pain, for Duhsasana, greatly afflicted by those shafts, overcome by fear entered with his division the Sakata array, seeking Drona as his deliverer |
Mbh.7.88.3875 | SECTION XC Sanjaya said, Slaying the force of Duhsasana, the mighty car-warrior, Savyasachin, desirous of getting at the ruler of the Sindhus, proceeded against the division of Drona, Having approached Drona who was stationed at the entrance of the array, Partha, at Krishna's request joined his hands and said these words unto Drona: Wish me well, O Brahmana, and bless me, saying Swasti! |
Mbh.7.92.4255 | The brave and wrathful Duhsasana, properly supported by his own divisions, angrily proceeded, in that battle, against Satyaki, that foremost of car-warriors. |
Mbh.7.93.4284 | Thy son Duhsasana, struck Satyaki of Vrishni's race with nine straight shafts of keen points. |
Mbh.7.95.4395 | Then thousands of princes placing Duhsasana at their head, hastily proceeded towards Drona for protecting him who was surrounded by foes. |
Mbh.7.109.5187 | They are commanded by Karna and devoted to Duhsasana. |
Mbh.7.113.5525 | And Durmarshana struck him with a dozen, Duhsasana, struck him with ten shafts. |
Mbh.7.113.5527 | And Durmukha struck him with ten shafts, and Duhsasana with eight, Chitrasena, O sire, pierced him with a couple of shafts. |
Mbh.7.113.5530 | Indeed, he pierced the son of Bharadwaja with three shafts, and Duhsasana with nine, and Vikarna with five and twenty, and Chitrasena with seven, and Durmarshana with a dozen, and Vivinsati with eight, and Satyavrata with nine, and Vijaya with ten shafts. |
Mbh.7.117.5696 | And Duryodhana and Chitrasena and Duhsasana and Vivinsati, and Sakuni and Duhsaha, and the youthful Durdharshana, and Kratha, and many other brave warriors well-conversant with weapons and difficult of defeat, wrathfully followed Satyaki from behind as he proceeded onwards. |
Mbh.7.117.5718 | And Duhsasana pierced that bull among the Sinis with sixteen arrows. |
Mbh.7.117.5720 | And Duhsasana pierced Satyaki in the chest with five and ten arrows. |
Mbh.7.117.5726 | And that bull of Sini's race then pierced Duhsasana with twenty arrows. |
Mbh.7.117.5728 | And Duhsasana pierced him with three. |
Mbh.7.118.5757 | Duhsasana, O Bharata, urging all those warriors, saying, Slay him, surrounded Satyaki therewith. |
Mbh.7.118.5764 | Whilst those soldiers were being thus slaughtered, Duhsasana, addressing the robbers said, Ye warriors unacquainted with morality, fight! |
Mbh.7.118.5766 | Beholding them run away without paying any heed to his words, thy soil Duhsasana urged on the brave mountaineers, skilled in fighting with stones, saying, Ye are accomplished in battling with stones. |
Mbh.7.118.5801 | Those other car-warriors also with whom Duhsasana had proceeded, all struck with panic, similarly rushed to the spot where Drona's car was seen. |
Mbh.7.119.5802 | SECTION CXXI Sanjaya said, Beholding Duhsasana's car staying near his, the son of Bharadwaja, addressing Duhsasana, said these words, Why, O Duhsasana, are all these cars flying away? |
Mbh.7.119.5815 | Having said these words then, why, O Duhsasana, dost thou fly from battle now? |
Mbh.7.119.5842 | Feigning not to have heard the words of Bharadwaja's son, Duhsasana proceeded to the place where Satyaki was. |
Mbh.7.119.5843 | Accompanied by a large force of unretreating Mlecchas, and coming upon Satyaki in battle, Duhsasana fought vigorously with that hero. |
Mbh.7.120.5892 | SECTION CXXII Sanjaya said, Meanwhile, O king, Duhsasana rushed against the grandson of Sini, scattering thousands of shafts like a mighty cloud pouring torrents of rain. |
Mbh.7.120.5896 | They that were at the van of Duhsasana, thus covered with those arrowy showers, all fled away in fear, in the very sight of thy son. |
Mbh.7.120.5897 | After they had fled away, O monarch, thy son Duhsasana, O king, remained fearlessly in battle and began to afflict Satyaki with arrows. |
Mbh.7.120.5898 | And piercing the four steeds of Satyaki with four arrows, his charioteer with three, and Satyaki himself with a hundred in that battle, Duhsasana uttered a loud roar, Then, O monarch, Madhava, inflamed with rage, soon made Duhsasana's car and driver and standard and Duhsasana himself invisible by means of his straight arrows. |
Mbh.7.120.5899 | Indeed, Satyaki entirely shrouded the brave Duhsasana with arrows. |
Mbh.7.120.5900 | Like a spider entangling a gnat within reach by means of its threads, that vanquisher of foes quickly covered Duhsasana with his shafts. |
Mbh.7.120.5901 | Then King Duryodhana, seeing Duhsasana thus covered with arrows, urged a body of Trigartas towards the car of Yuyudhana. |
Mbh.7.120.5909 | And as that foremost of men was thus proceeding thy son Duhsasana quickly pierced him with nine straight arrows. |
Mbh.7.120.5910 | That mighty bowman then Yuyudhana, pierced Duhsasana, in return, with five straight and sharp arrows equipped with golden wings and vulturine feather. |
Mbh.7.120.5911 | Then Duhsasana, O Bharata, smiling the while, pierced Satyaki, O monarch, with three arrows, and once more with five. |
Mbh.7.120.5913 | Then Duhsasana, inflamed with wrath and desirous of slaying the Vrishni hero, hurled at him, as he proceeded, a dart made wholly of iron. |
Mbh.7.120.5917 | And once more, he pierced Duhsasana with eight shafts made wholly of iron and having very keen points. |
Mbh.7.120.5918 | Duhsasana, however, pierced Satyaki in return with twenty arrows. |
Mbh.7.120.5919 | Then, the highly-blessed Satyaki, O monarch, pierced Duhsasana in the centre of the chest with three straight arrows. |
Mbh.7.120.5920 | And the mighty car-warrior Yuyudhana, with some straight shafts slew the steeds of Duhsasana; inflamed with wrath he slew, with some straight arrows, that the latter's charioteer also. |
Mbh.7.120.5927 | Then, O lord, Satyaki, having thus vanquished Duhsasana, quickly proceeded, O king, along the track by which Dhananjaya had gone before him |
Mbh.7.124.6168 | Then the brothers Duhsasana and Chitrasena. |
Mbh.7.124.6204 | Then Duhsasana, excited with wrath, hurled at Bhimasena a keen dart made entirely of iron, wishing to slay the son of Pandu. |
Mbh.7.129.6454 | Then that chastiser of foes, viz, Bhima recollecting all the woes suffered by him on the occasion of the match at dice, and during his exile in the woods and residence in Virata's city, and bearing in mind the robbing of their kingdom swelling with prosperity and gems, by thy sons, and the numerous other wrongs inflicted on the Pandavas by thee and the Suta's son and remembering also the fact that thou hadst conspired to burn innocent Kunti with her sons, and calling to his memory the sufferings of Krishna in the midst of the assembly at the hands of those wretches, as also the seizure of her tresses by Duhsasana, and the harsh speeches uttered, O Bharata, by Karna, to the effect, Take thou another husband, for all thy husbands are dead: the sons of Pritha have sunk into hell and are like sesamum seeds without kernel, remembering also those other words, O son of Kuru, that the Kauravas uttered in thy presence, add the fact also that thy sons had been desirous of enjoying Krishna as a slave, and those harsh words that Karna spoke to the sons of Pandu when the latter, attired in deer-skins were about to be banished to the woods, and the joy in which thy wrathful and foolish son, himself in prosperity, indulged, thinking the distressed sons of Pritha as veritable straw, the virtuous Bhima that slayer of foes, remembering these and all the woes he had suffered since his childhood, became reckless of his very life. |
Mbh.7.132.6582 | Without doubt, reflecting upon what the angry and fierce Bhima had said in the assembly in the hearing of the Kurus about the slaughter of my sons, and beholding the defeat of Karna, Duhsasana and his brothers ceased to encounter Bhima from fear. |
Mbh.7.132.6583 | That wicked son also of mine, O Sanjaya, who repeatedly said in the assembly these words, viz Karna and Duhsasana and I myself will vanquish the Pandavas in battle, without doubt, beholding Karna defeated and deprived of his car by Bhima, is consumed with grief in consequence of his rejection of Krishna's suit |
Mbh.7.137.6896 | Whithersoever that lion among men desired to go, thither he was borne by those excellent steeds of his, of the Sindhu breed, well-broken, docile, white as milk of the Kunda flower or the moon or snow, and adorned with trappings of warriors, viz, Duhsasana, their commander. |
Mbh.7.137.6899 | Quickly checking all of them by means of his fiery shafts, that slayer of foes, viz, the grandson of Sini, forcibly uplifting his bow, O Ajamida, slew the steeds of Duhsasana. |
Mbh.7.142.7191 | How will Vibhatsu, who seems to have been urged on by Fate, get at the ruler of the Sindhus when the latter if protected by Drona's son, by myself, and Duhsasana? |
Mbh.7.144.7527 | After Karna hath been made carless, thy brave sons, headed by Duhsasana, O king, were not slain by the self-restrained Satyaki because the latter wished not to falsify the vow made by Bhimasena. |
Mbh.7.148.7762 | United with Duhsasana, Karna then fanned that wrath. |
Mbh.7.148.7779 | When I saw Bhishma himself, that achiever of the most difficult feats in battle, that warrior who was incapable of being slain in battle by the gods with Vasava at their head, slain in thy sight, O Kaurava, as also of thy younger brother Duhsasana, I thought then, O king, that the Earth hath abandoned thee. |
Mbh.7.153.8146 | Karna also, and Vrishasena and Kripa, and Nila, and the Northerners, and Kritavarman, and the sons of Purumitra, and Duhsasana, and Nikumbha, and Kundabhedin, and Puranjaya and Dridharatha, and Hemakampana, and Salya, and Aruni, and Indrasena, and Sanjaya, and Vijaya, and Jaya, and Purakrathin, and Jayavarman, and Sudarsana, these will follow thee, with sixty thousand foot-soldiers. |
Mbh.7.155.8362 | Duryodhana, and Drona, and Sakuni, and Durmukha, and Jaya, and Duhsasana, and Vrishasena, and the ruler of the Madras, and thyself too and Somadatta and Drona's son, and Vivinsati, all these heroes skilled in battle, are here, clad in mail. |
Mbh.7.162.8767 | Duhsasana, O king, contending vigorously, resisted Prativindhya as the letter advanced with resolution on his car, drawn by steeds looking like peacocks. |
Mbh.7.166.8961 | Thy son Duhsasana proceeded against that mighty car-warrior, viz, Prativindhya, who was advancing against Drona, scorching his foes in battle. |
Mbh.7.166.8963 | Duhsasana pierced Prativindhya, who was accomplishing fierce feats in battle, with three arrows on the forehead. |
Mbh.7.166.8965 | The mighty car-warrior Prativindhya, then, piercing Duhsasana with three arrows, once more pierced him with seven, Thy son, then, O Bharata, achieved there an exceedingly difficult feat, for he felled Prativindhya's steeds with many arrows. |
Mbh.7.166.8970 | Then Duhsasana, displaying great lightness of hand, cut off Prativindhya's bow. |
Mbh.7.168.9047 | And Drona's son pierced him with five, and Drona himself with five, and Salya pierced him with nine, and Duhsasana with three. |
Mbh.7.168.9102 | Duhsasana and Durvishaha and Suvahu and Dushpradharshana, these will follow thee, surrounded by a large number of foot-soldiers. |
Mbh.7.172.9286 | SECTION CLXXIV Sanjaya said, Beholding the mighty-armed Ghatotkacha, O king, proceeding towards the car of Suta's son, Karna for slaughtering him in battle, thy son Duryodhana addressing Duhsasana, said these words, The Rakshasa, seeing the prowess of Karna in battle, is speedily advancing against him. |
Mbh.7.180.9806 | Sanjaya said, Indeed, O king, every night this formed the subject of deliberation with Duryodhana and Sakuni and myself and Duhsasana. |
Mbh.7.180.9827 | Vasudeva said, Duhsasana and Karna and Sakuni and the ruler of the Sindhus, with Duryodhana at their head, had frequently debated on this subject. |
Mbh.7.183.10034 | Sanjaya continued, Unto Drona who was thus applauding Arjuna, thy son, O king, angered thereat, once more said these words: Myself and Duhsasana, and Karna, and my maternal uncle, Sakuni, dividing this Bharata host into two divisions and taking one with us, shall to-day slay Arjuna in battle' |
Mbh.7.183.10051 | With Karna in thy company, thou hadst often joyfully boasted, from folly and emptiness of understanding, in the hearing of Dhritarashtra, saying, O sire, myself, and Karna, and my brother Duhsasana, these three, uniting together, will slay the sons of Pandu in battle' |
Mbh.7.185.10168 | During that great carnage of the Kshatriyas on earth, on that field of battle, enhancing the terrors of the timid and looking like a crematorium neither Karna, nor Drona, nor Arjuna, nor Yudhishthira, nor Bhimasena, nor the twins, nor the Panchala prince, nor Satyaki, nor Duhsasana, nor Drona's son, nor Duryodhana nor Suvala's son, nor Kripa, nor the ruler of the Madras, nor Kritavarman, nor others, nor my own self, nor the earth, nor points of the compass, could be seen, O king, for all of them, mingled with the troops, were shrouded by clouds of dust. |
Mbh.7.185.10174 | Then Duryodhana, Karna, Drona and Duhsasana, these four Kauravas warriors engaged in battle with four of the Pandava warriors, Duryodhana and his brothers, encountered the twins Nakula and Sahadeva. |
Mbh.7.186.10190 | SECTION CLXXXVIII Sanjaya said, Then Duhsasana, filled with wrath, rushed against Sahadeva, causing the earth to tremble with the fierce speed of his car, O Madri's son, however, that crusher of foes, with a broad-headed arrow, quickly cut of the head, decked with the head-gear of his rushing antagonist's driver. |
Mbh.7.186.10191 | From the celerity with which that act was accomplished by Sahadeva, neither Duhsasana nor any of the troops knew that the driver's head had been cut off. |
Mbh.7.186.10193 | It was then that Duhsasana knew that his driver had been slain. |
Mbh.7.187.10259 | SECTION CXC Sanjaya said, During that fearful carnage of men and steeds and elephants, Duhsasana, O king, encountered Dhrishtadyumna. |
Mbh.7.187.10260 | Mounted upon hi, golden car and exceedingly afflicted with the shafts of Duhsasana, the Panchala prince wrathfully showered his shafts upon thy son's steeds. |
Mbh.7.187.10262 | Afflicted with those showers of arrows, Duhsasana, O monarch, became unable to stay before the illustrious prince of the Panchalas. |
Mbh.7.187.10263 | Forcing, by means of his shafts, Duhsasana to turn back Pritha's son, scattering his arrows, proceeded against Drona in that battle. |
Mbh.7.191.10592 | Handsome and endued with youth, and reputed for his bravery, Duhsasana, also, in great anxiety, fled away surrounded by his elephant division. |
Mbh.7.198.11120 | And Duhsasana pierced him with a hundred arrows, and Vrishasena with seven. |
Mbh.13.148.12487 | Indeed, through the fault of Duryodhana, of Karna, of Sakuni, and of Duhsasana numbering the fourth, that the Kurus have perished. |
Jijith Nadumuri Ravi
Research data published for the interest of people researching on Mahabharata.
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Reference:- Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa, translated to English by Kisari Mohan Ganguli; Source of Plain Text: www.sacred-texts.com; Wikified at AncientVoice. |
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