Partha S
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 01 Mar 2010 10:41 and updated at 01 Mar 2010 10:41
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
MAHABHARATA NOUN
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Mbh.4.46.1806 | Thou shalt have to repent upon beholding thy army afflicted by Partha's arrows. |
Mbh.4.48.1871 | Discharged from my bow, my arrows like venomous snakes will pierce Partha's body, like serpent penetrating through an ant-hill. |
Mbh.4.55.2101 | And affrighted at the havoc amongst their own ranks, the steeds fled in all directions, freed from their yokes by means of Partha's arrows and dragging after them broken portions of cars and elephants, struck on their ears and ribs and tusks and nether lips and other delicate parts of the body, began to drop down on the battle-field. |
Mbh.4.55.2117 | And struck and mangled by Partha, the hostile warriors thought that, Verily, Indra himself, desirous of Partha's victory, accompanied by all the immortals is slaying us! |
Mbh.4.55.2119 | And the troops of the Kurus, struck by Partha, were so mangled and shattered that the scene looked like the achievement of Partha himself and could be compared with nothing else save what was observable in Partha's combats. |
Mbh.4.55.2131 | And beholding those soldiers break and give way the son of Virata desirous of knowing Partha's purpose, addressed him on the field of battle, and said, O Partha, standing on this beautiful car, with myself as charioteer, towards which division shall I go? |
Mbh.4.58.2236 | And at this, the mighty Drona, displaying his lightness of hand in the use of weapons, covered Partha's car with a thousand arrows. |
Mbh.4.58.2275 | And in that encounter between Drona and Arjuna, beholding the field covered with arms decked with bangles, and gorgeously-attired car-warriors, and coats of mail variegated with gold, and with banners lying scattered all about, and with warriors slain by means of Partha's arrows, the Kuru host became panic-stricken. |
Mbh.4.58.2280 | And beholding Partha's infallibility, training, fleetness of hand, and the range also of Arjuna's, arrows, Drona became amazed. |
Mbh.4.58.2290 | And Maghavat, together with those Gandharvas and Apsaras that have come there, applauded the fleetness of Partha's hand. |
Mbh.4.63.2449 | And Bhishma, endued with great energy, pierced Partha's flag-staff with eight arrows. |
Mbh.4.63.2457 | And, O king, in consequence of Partha's shooting arrows with both his right and left hands, the bent Gandiva seemed like a continuous circle of fire. |
Mbh.4.65.2534 | And the mighty-armed Bhishma also, the son of Santanu, turning back his steeds decked with gold, enormous in size, and of tawny hue, rushed bow in hand, for protecting Duryodhana from Partha's hand. |
Mbh.4.65.2568 | And the celestials also, having witnessed that most wonderful encounter between Falguna and the Kurus, were highly delighted, and went to their respective abodes, reflecting upon Partha's feats |
Mbh.5.47.2652 | And anxious to hear the message of Partha's, fraught with virtue and profit, all the kings with Dhritarashtra at their head, went to that beautiful hall. |
Mbh.5.82.3936 | Fie to Partha's bowmanship, oh, fie to Bhimasena's might since Duryodhana, O Krishna, liveth for even a moment. |
Mbh.6.23.1037 | Sanjaya continued, Understanding the measure of Partha's devotion, Durga who is always graciously inclined towards mankind, appeared in the firmament and in the presence of Govinda, said these words. |
Mbh.6.52.2712 | Thus addressed, O king, thy sire Devavrata, saying, Fie to Kshatriya usage, then proceeded towards Partha's car. |
Mbh.6.59.3152 | And having applauded Partha thus, and taking up another large bow, that hero shot his shafts at Partha's car. |
Mbh.6.59.3166 | As regards Arjuna, though struck in battle with keen shafts, he knoweth not what he should do, from respect for Bhishma, And while Krishna was reflecting thus the grandsire, excited with wrath, once again shot his shafts at Partha's car. |
Mbh.6.59.3224 | And the twang of Partha's Gandiva, resembling the roll of the thunder, filled the welkin and all the quarters. |
Mbh.6.59.3232 | And those shafts from Partha's bow, cutting off the arms, bows, standard-tops, and cars, penetrated into the bodies of the kings and of the huge elephants and steeds of the foe. |
Mbh.6.103.5489 | Drona, however, regarded not those shafts shot in battle from Partha's bow. |
Mbh.6.107.5707 | Having addressed him thus, Bhishma took up another beautiful bow in that battle, and shot many arrows at Partha's car. |
Mbh.6.107.5711 | Abandoning then, O sire, Partha's steeds that looked like silver, and filled with wrath, that great lord of Yoga powers jumped down from that great car. |
Mbh.7.19.879 | Graced with tails, looking like those of the yak, and covered with coats of mail, and with their entrails and eyes dragged out, steeds along with their riders, rolled on the ground, slain by means of Partha's shafts. |
Mbh.7.20.890 | I have made arrangements for Partha's encounter with the Samsaptaka |
Mbh.7.25.1341 | Huge elephants, well-equipped and resembling foremost hills over-grown with woods or masses of clouds, afflicted with Partha's shafts and deprived of riders, fell down on the earth. |
Mbh.7.26.1350 | SECTION XXVI Sanjaya said, At Partha's desire, Krishna then urged his white steeds, fleet as the mind and covered in golden armour, towards Drona's divisions. |
Mbh.7.28.1496 | Struck with Partha's shafts, many warriors abandoned the very animals that bore them |
Mbh.7.76.3340 | Having consoled his sister and Draupadi and Uttara thus, that chastiser of foes, viz, the mighty-armed Krishna, returned to Partha's side. |
Mbh.7.77.3349 | And the illustrious one Kesava of eyes like lotus petals, began for Partha's sake, to think of various means that would dispel Partha's grief and anxiety and enhance his prowess and splendour. |
Mbh.7.77.3370 | In the middle of the night, Janardana, having awaked, remembered Partha's vow, and addressing his charioteer Daruka, said, Arjuna, in grief for the death of his son, hath vowed. |
Mbh.7.78.3425 | The bird-bannered Krishna hearing this cause of Partha's grief, touched water and sat with face turned to the east. |
Mbh.7.86.3842 | Others that rode on elephants, fled away, urging those huge beasts by pressing their flanks with their hooks and many warriors struck by Partha's arrows, in flying, ran against Partha himself. |
Mbh.7.90.4066 | And thousands of elephants along with their riders and those on foot that urged them forward, struck with Partha's shafts, vomited blood, or uttered shrieks of agony, or fell down, or ran ungovernably in all directions. |
Mbh.7.96.4453 | The might then that we beheld, of Partha's arms was exceedingly great, since, filled with rage, alone, he succeeded in resisting those countless warriors. |
Mbh.7.98.4533 | Indeed, beholding them freed from Drona and Kritavarman, thy warriors regarded the colour of Partha's and Krishna's face to be dreadful; and thy men then, from all sides, set up a loud wail. |
Mbh.7.136.6857 | Those arrows adorned with gold, shot by Partha's arms and issuing out of Gandiva, entered Karna's body, like cranes into the Krauncha mountains. |
Mbh.7.139.7027 | That arrow, shot by Partha's hand and resembling a meteor flashing down from the firmament, cut off the Kuru warrior's arm with the sword in the grasp and decked with Angada |
Mbh.7.143.7359 | Thy warriors, O king, thinking the sun to have set were filled with delight at the prospect of Partha's laying down his life. |
Mbh.7.143.7380 | I did not in that battle, O king, see a single elephant or steed or human warrior that was not struck with Partha's shafts. |
Mbh.7.155.8309 | Those roars of thine disappear when thou art pierced with Partha's shafts. |
Mbh.7.156.8467 | The brave Kuru king can remain alive in battle as long only as he doth not place himself within the range of Partha's shafts. |
Mbh.7.156.8499 | Behold, our army, afflicted with Partha's shafts, is breaking and flying away. |
Mbh.7.169.9137 | And once more shooting a hundred shafts, he checked the progress of Partha's great car. |
Mbh.7.180.9780 | Upon Partha's slaughter by means of that dart, all the Srinjayas and the Pandavas would have been slain. |
Mbh.7.180.9809 | Or, if upon Partha's fall, he of Vrishni's race appoints another amongst the sons of Pandu in this place for carrying on the fight, let Krishna himself be slain. |
Mbh.8.46.2565 | There, on the top of Partha's standard, is to be seen that terrible ape, that enhancer of the fears of foes, attracting the gaze of warriors from every side. |
Mbh.8.56.3248 | In consequence of the sound of Partha's palms, people thought that the Earth, or the vault of the welkin, or all the points of the compass, or the several oceans, or the mountains seemed to split. |
Mbh.8.64.3718 | All the spectators beheld a large number of car-warriors along with their cars, belonging to the division of Ashvatthama, slain and destroyed by means of the arrows sped from Partha's bow. |
Mbh.8.64.3722 | Car-warriors, deprived of life with shafts sped from Partha's bow, fell down. |
Mbh.8.64.3729 | Thus cut off with Partha's shafts, it fell down on the Earth, like a mountain, O king, broken into pieces, struck with the thunderbolt. |
Mbh.8.64.3733 | The son of Drona, however, overwhelmed with Partha's shafts, penetrated through that shower of arrows shot by the son of Pandu, and approaching the latter, invoked a mighty weapon and suddenly pierced Krishna with hundred shafts and Arjuna with three hundred small arrows. |
Mbh.8.77.4656 | As soon as the valiant Bhimasena heard of Partha's arrival, he began, O monarch, to grind thy troops, reckless of his very life. |
Mbh.8.79.4894 | His weapons destroyed by Partha's shafts, and his standard also having been crushed in that great battle, Kripa was afflicted with as many thousands of arrows by Arjuna as Ganga's son Bhishma before them on the day of his fall by the same diademdecked warrior. |
Mbh.8.85.5209 | Struck with Partha's shafts, the son of Karna, deprived of arms and head, fell down on the earth from his car, like a gigantic shala adorned with flowers falling down from a mountain summit. |
Mbh.8.87.5292 | The welkin, O monarch, with all the stars, became anxious on Karna's account, while the wide earth became so on Partha's account, like the mother for her son. |
Mbh.8.89.5499 | Cutting off Partha's showers of shafts proceeding from the mouth of that weapon of Indra which Arjuna had shot, Karna, having thus baffled his antagonist's weapon with his own, destroyed cars and elephants and foot-soldiers of the Pandava army. |
Mbh.8.89.5520 | Then Vasudeva, beholding Partha's shafts baffled by Karna, said unto the former, What is this, O diadem-decked Arjuna, that Karna should succeed in crushing thy weapons today with this? |
Mbh.8.89.5568 | Having pierced Krishna and Partha's standard, Karna felled many amongst the Somakas that followed Partha. |
Mbh.8.89.5584 | Deeply struck with those winged arrows of fierce energy shot with great force from Partha's bow, Karna, with mangled limbs and body bathed in blood, looked resplendent like Rudra at the universal destruction, sporting in the midst of crematorium at noon or eve, his body dyed with blood. |
Mbh.8.90.5630 | The Suta's son then fixed on his bow-string that foe-killing, exceedingly keen, snake-mouthed, blazing, and fierce shaft, which had been polished according to rule, and which he had long kept for the sake of Partha's destruction. |
Mbh.8.90.5655 | That snake, O king, forcibly tore it away from Partha's head, quickly reducing into fragments that well-made ornament set over with many a gem and blazing with beauty, like the thunderbolt riving a mountain summit decked with lofty and beautiful trees graced with flowers. |
Mbh.8.90.5747 | Those arrows endued with great energy and power, issuing out of Partha's car, were seen to be displayed in the vicinity of Karna's vehicle. |
Mbh.8.91.5809 | Then, O king, blazing flames of fire seemed to emanate from all the pores of the angry Partha's body. |
Mbh.8.94.6032 | Indeed, that tiger among men lay like a heap of pure gold, or like a blazing fire extinguished with the water of Partha's shafts. |
Mbh.8.94.6034 | Having shot showers of arrows and scorched the ten points of the compass, that tiger among men, viz, Karna, along with his sons, was quieted by Partha's energy. |
Mbh.8.96.6143 | Sanjaya continued, Beholding Karna with his son slain with Partha's shafts, that perpetuator of Kuru's race, Yudhishthira, regarded himself as reborn. |
Mbh.9.14.826 | Struck in that battle with arrows inscribed with Partha's name, those warriors, beholding that state of things, regarded the field of battle to be full of Parthas. |
Mbh.9.14.828 | Then, O Bharata, heaps of fallen wheels and yokes, of quivers, of banners and standards, with the vehicles themselves that bore them, of shafts and Anukarshas and Trivenus, of axles and traces and goads, of heads of warriors decked with earrings and headgears, of arms, O monarch, and thighs in thousands of umbrellas along with fans, and of diadems and crowns, were seen along the tracks of Partha's car. |
Mbh.9.14.829 | Indeed, along the track of the angry Partha's car, O monarch, the ground, miry with blood, became impassable, O chief of the Bharatas, like the sporting ground of Rudra. |
Mbh.9.14.847 | Cut off with Partha's shafts in that great battle, that weapon fell down on the Earth, riving the hearts, as it were, O Bharata, of the hostile kings. |
Mbh.9.22.1552 | The whole world seemed to be filled with gold-winged shafts, steeped in oil, polished by the hands of the smith, and marked with Partha's name. |
Mbh.9.23.1572 | Many mighty car-warriors, struck with Partha's shafts and deeply pierced therewith, were seen to breathe hard, deprived of their senses. |
Mbh.12.27.1208 | When I beheld that lion among men, viz, our grandsire, assailed by Sikhandin and trembling and reeling in consequence of Partha's shafts that resembled thunder-bolts in energy, when I beheld his tall form pierced all over with blazing arrows and himself become weak like an aged lion, my heart was deeply pained. |
Mbh.15.38.1625 | Fie on the celebrated success of Partha's shafts! |
Jijith Nadumuri Ravi
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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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