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Shloka 513

Duryodhana-patana-anuśocana

The Fall of Duryodhana and the Contest of Restraint

ववर्ष मघवांस्तत्र तव पुत्रे निपातिते । भरतनन्दन! आपके पुत्रके धराशायी हो जानेपर इन्द्रने वहाँ रक्त और धूलिकी वर्षा की

vavarṣa maghavāṁs tatra tava putre nipātite | bharatanandana!

婆罗多之子啊!当你的儿子被击倒、横卧于彼处时,摩伽梵(因陀罗)令那地方降下怪异之雨——血雨与尘雨。这一凶兆昭示:战士的陨落不仅是个人的悲恸,更是战争道德风暴中,宇宙所显现的征象。

ववर्षrained, poured down
ववर्ष:
TypeVerb
Root√वृष्
Formलिट् (Perfect), 3, singular, परस्मैपदम्
मघवान्Maghavan (Indra)
मघवान्:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootमघवत् (इन्द्र)
Formmasculine, nominative, singular
तत्रthere
तत्र:
Adhikarana
TypeIndeclinable
Rootतत्र
तवyour
तव:
Sambandha
TypePronoun
Rootयुष्मद्
Form—, genitive, singular
पुत्रेwhen (your) son / in (your) son (context: upon your son)
पुत्रे:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootपुत्र
Formmasculine, locative, singular
निपातितेhaving been felled / slain
निपातिते:
TypeVerb
Rootनि-√पत् (णिच्) → निपातित
Formpast passive participle (क्त), masculine, locative, singular

वायुदेव उवाच

V
Vāyudeva (Wind-god)
M
Maghavān (Indra)
T
tava putra (your son)
B
Bharatanandana (Bharata prince, addressee)

Educational Q&A

The verse frames a warrior’s death as an event with moral and cosmic resonance: in a dharmic crisis like the Kurukṣetra war, nature and gods mirror the disorder through ominous signs, reminding listeners that violence leaves a stain beyond the battlefield.

Vāyudeva reports that after the addressee’s son has been slain and lies fallen, Indra (Maghavān) sends an uncanny shower of blood and dust at that spot—an inauspicious portent marking the gravity of the moment.