Mountain
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 28 Feb 2010 15:44 and updated at 28 Feb 2010 15:44
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
MAHABHARATA NOUN
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Mbh.3.108.5567 | for practising austerities, went to the side of the snowy Mountain the Himalayas. |
Mbh.3.224.11330 | Markandeya continued, Then assuming the disguise of a winged creature, she went out of the forest and reached the White Mountain begirt with clumps of heath and other plants and trees, and guarded by strange seven-headed serpents with poison in their very looks, and abounding with Rakshasas, male and female Pisachas, terrible spirits, and various kinds of birds and animals. |
Mbh.3.224.11351 | And rising from his seat, that mighty god allayed the fears of all those people, and then drawing his bow, he discharged his arrows in the direction of the White Mountain. |
Mbh.3.224.11357 | And that high-souled being then hurled his mace of great lustre and quickly rent in twain one of the peaks of the White Mountain. |
Mbh.3.224.11358 | And the White Mountain being thus pierced by him was greatly afraid of him and dissociating himself from the earth fled with the other mountains. |
Mbh.3.228.11472 | The White Mountain was formed from discharges of Rudra's semen virile and the sensual indulgences of the Fire-god with the Krittikas took place on that same White Mountain. |
Mbh.3.230.11598 | Surrounded by hosts of gods and Pisachas and seated on the Golden Mountain, he looked splendid in all the grandeur of prosperity. |
Mbh.3.230.11600 | The White Mountain was adorned with whole tracts of wood-land covered with blossoming Santanaka flowers and with forests of Karavira, Parijata, Jana and Asoke trees, as also with wild tracts overgrown with Kadamva trees; and it abounded with herds of celestial deer and flocks of celestial birds. |
Mbh.3.230.11603 | Thus the whole world with Indra himself seemed to have been transferred to the White Mountain. |
Mbh.6.11.577 | But because the people there are all dark, therefore is that mountain called the Dark Mountain. |
Mbh.7.112.5510 | Thereupon, those two arms, looking like a couple of spiked maces, fell down from that foremost of elephants, like a couple of five-headed snakes falling down from a Mountain. |
Mbh.8.30.1322 | Whilst thy warriors were thus engaged in battle from desire of victory, the Sun approaching the Setting Mountain, entered it. |
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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