Raudra
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 28 Feb 2010 17:47 and updated at 28 Feb 2010 17:47
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
MAHABHARATA NOUN
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Mbh.3.166.8372 | O Pandava, my own weapon Raudra shall attend upon thee' |
Mbh.3.172.8658 | Thereupon collecting my energies in fight, I bowed down unto that god of gods, Raudra, and saying, May welfare attend on all beings' |
Mbh.3.172.8659 | I fixed that mighty weapon which, celebrated under the name of Raudra, is the destroyer of all foes. |
Mbh.3.172.8663 | And saying, O best of the Bharatas, the dreadful and eternal Raudra, I being free from fear, set it on the Gandiva; and, bowing unto the three-eyed Sarva of immeasurable energy, let go the weapon, with the object of vanquishing those foremost of the Danavas, O Bharata. |
Mbh.3.172.8669 | And, seeing those adorned with unearthly ornaments, crushed by the weapon, the Raudra, the charioteer of the celestials, experienced the greatest delight. |
Mbh.3.223.11277 | It being the time of the new Moon, he of a hundred sacrifices, at the Raudra moment, observed the gods and Asuras fighting on the Sunrise hill. |
Mbh.4.61.2399 | I have obtained from Rudra the Raudra, from Varuna the Varuna from Agni the Agneya, from the god of Wind the Vayava, and from Sakra the thunderbolt and other weapons. |
Mbh.7.23.1179 | The five jewels of bows born by the five sons of Draupadi were the Raudra, the Agneya, the Kauverya, the Yamya, and the Girisa. |
Mbh.7.23.1180 | That excellent and best of bows, called the Raudra, which Rohini's son Valadeva had obtained, the latter gave unto the high-souled son of Subhadra, having been gratified with him. |
Mbh.8.90.5762 | Then Dhananjaya, filled with rage, inspiring with mantras another celestial weapons that looked like fire and that resembled the poison of the snake and that was as hard as the essence of adamant, and uniting the Raudra weapon with it, became desirous of shooting it at his foe. |
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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