Adhyaya 11 — Draupadī’s Grief, Demand for Justice, and Bhīma’s Departure
नामर्षयत कौन्तेयो भीमसेनो महाबल: । दुःखके कारण द्रौपदीका यह भाँति-भाँतिका विलाप सुनकर महाबली कुन्तीकुमार भीमसेन इसे सहन न कर सके ।।
vaiśampāyana uvāca |
na amarṣayat kaunteyo bhīmaseno mahābalaḥ |
duḥkha-kāraṇaṃ draupadyāḥ evaṃ bhānti-bhānti-kam vilāpaṃ śrutvā mahābalī kuntī-kumāro bhīmasenaḥ etat soḍhuṃ na śaśāka ||
sa kāñcana-vicitra-aṅgaṃ ratham āruroha mahārathaḥ |
visphārya saśaraṃ cāpaṃ tūṛṇam aśvān acodayat ||
Vaiśampāyana sprach: Der überaus mächtige Bhīmasena, Sohn der Kuntī, konnte es nicht ertragen, als er Draupadīs vielgestaltige Klage vernahm—geboren aus Leid und dessen Ursachen. Entschlossen, Droṇas Sohn zu töten, bestieg jener große Wagenkämpfer einen prächtigen, goldgeschmückten Streitwagen von kunstvoller, vielfältiger Arbeit; den Bogen mit bereiten Pfeilen spannte er und trieb die Rosse sogleich voran (wobei Nakula als Wagenlenker diente).
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The passage highlights how grief can ignite a powerful impulse toward retribution; it frames Bhīma’s response as a kṣatriya’s decisive resolve, while implicitly raising the ethical tension between righteous justice and anger-driven vengeance.
Hearing Draupadī’s intense lament after the night massacre, Bhīma cannot bear it; he mounts an ornate chariot, readies his bow and arrows, and rushes forward determined to kill Droṇa’s son (Aśvatthāmā), with Nakula acting as charioteer in the given account.