Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 55

भीमसेनस्य बहुमहारथसंयुगः

Bhīmasena’s Engagement with Multiple Mahārathas

नामृष्यत महाबाहुर्माधव: परवीरहा,तब शत्रुवीरोंका नाश करनेवाले महाबाहु माधवको यह सहन नहीं हुआ। आर्य! वे योगेश्वर भगवान्‌ वासुदेव चाँदीके समान सफेद रंगवाले अर्जुनके घोड़ोंको छोड़कर उस विशाल रथसे कूद पड़े और केवल भुजाओंका ही आयुध लिये हाथोंमें चाबुक उठाये बारंबार सिंहनाद करते हुए बलवान्‌ एवं तेजस्वी श्रीहरि भीष्मकी ओर बड़े वेगसे दौड़े

sañjaya uvāca | nāmṛṣyata mahābāhur mādhavaḥ paravīrahā | tadā śatruvīrāṇāṃ nāśaṃ kartum asahyaṃ tasya babhūva | ārya! sa yogeśvaro bhagavān vāsudevaḥ rajatasadṛśaśvetavarṇān arjunasya hayān vihāya tasmād mahārathāt praskandya kevalaṃ bhujāyudho hastayoḥ kaśāṃ gṛhītvā punaḥ punaḥ siṃhanādaṃ kurvan balavān tejasvī śrīhariḥ bhīṣmaṃ prati mahāvegād dhāvamānaḥ ||

Sañjaya dijo: Mādhava, de poderosos brazos, matador de los héroes enemigos, no pudo soportarlo. ¡Oh noble! El Señor Vāsudeva, maestro del yoga, saltó del gran carro, dejando atrás los caballos de Arjuna, blancos como la plata. Tomando sólo sus propios brazos por armas y empuñando el látigo, rugiendo una y otra vez como un león, el poderoso y radiante Śrī Hari se precipitó a gran velocidad hacia Bhīṣma.

nanot
na:
TypeIndeclinable
Rootna
amṛṣyatadid not endure / could not bear
amṛṣyata:
TypeVerb
Rootmṛṣ (to endure/forbear)
FormImperfect (Laṅ), 3, singular, Parasmaipada
mahābāhuḥthe mighty-armed one
mahābāhuḥ:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootmahā-bāhu (m.)
Formmasculine, nominative, singular
mādhavaḥMādhava (Kṛṣṇa)
mādhavaḥ:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootmādhava (m.)
Formmasculine, nominative, singular
para-vīra-hāslayer of enemy-heroes
para-vīra-hā:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootpara-vīra-han (m.)
Formmasculine, nominative, singular

संजय उवाच

S
Sañjaya
M
Mādhava (Kṛṣṇa)
V
Vāsudeva (Kṛṣṇa)
Ś
Śrī Hari (Kṛṣṇa)
A
Arjuna
B
Bhīṣma
C
chariot (ratha)
H
horses (hayāḥ)
W
whip (kaśā)

Educational Q&A

Even the divine charioteer, committed to restraint, may act decisively when dharma is endangered: righteous resolve can require stepping beyond prior self-imposed limits to protect the just cause and prevent unchecked destruction.

Seeing the battle situation become intolerable, Kṛṣṇa (Mādhava/Vāsudeva) leaps from Arjuna’s chariot, leaving the horses, seizes the whip, roars like a lion, and charges at Bhīṣma with great speed—signaling an urgent, dramatic intervention in the fight.