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Shloka 56

Chapter 59: Baladeva’s Censure, Keśava’s Restraint, and Yudhiṣṭhira’s Moral Accounting

शिरश्न राजसिंहस्य पादेन समलोडयत्‌ | ऐसा कहकर भीमसेनने अपने बायें पैरसे उसके मुकुटको ठुकराया और उस राजसिंहके मस्तकपर भी पैरसे ठोकर मारा

śiraś ca rājasiṃhasya pādena samaloḍayat |

Sañjaya said: Bhīmasena, speaking thus, struck down the crown with his left foot and then kicked the head of that ‘lion among kings’. The act underscores the brutal culmination of vengeance on the battlefield, where rage and retribution eclipse the courtesies traditionally owed to a fallen warrior.

शिरःhead
शिरः:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootशिरस्
FormNeuter, Accusative, Singular
राजसिंहस्यof the king-lion (lion among kings)
राजसिंहस्य:
TypeNoun
Rootराजसिंह
FormMasculine, Genitive, Singular
पादेनwith (his) foot
पादेन:
Karana
TypeNoun
Rootपाद
FormMasculine, Instrumental, Singular
समलोडयत्he struck/kicked (violently)
समलोडयत्:
TypeVerb
Rootसम् + लुड्
FormImperfect (Laṅ), 3rd, Singular

संजय उवाच

S
Sañjaya
B
Bhīmasena (Bhīma)
R
rājasiṃha (epithet for the fallen king/warrior)
C
crown (mukuṭa, implied by the Hindi gloss)
H
head

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights how vengeance and fury in war can lead to acts that violate the ideal kṣatriya ethic of restraint and respect toward a defeated foe, inviting reflection on the moral costs of hatred even amid ‘just’ warfare.

Sañjaya narrates that Bhīma, after speaking, uses his left foot to knock away the fallen warrior’s crown and then kicks his head—an emphatic gesture of contempt and triumph at a climactic moment of the conflict.