SECTION 23
Vaisampayana said,--'then Krishna, addressing
king Jarasandha who was resolved upon fighting, said,--'O king, with whom
amongst us three dost thou desire to fight? Who amongst us shall prepare
himself for battle with thee?' Thus addressed, the ruler of Magadha, king
Jarasandha, expressed his desire for fighting with Bhima. The priest then,
bringing with him the yellow pigment obtained from the cow and garlands of
flowers and other auspicious articles, as also various excellent medicines for
restoring lost consciousness and alleviating pain, approached Jarasandha, panting
for battle. The king Jarasandha, on whose behalf propitiatory ceremonies with
benedictions were performed by a renowned Brahmana, remembering the duty of a
Kshatriya dressed himself for battle. Taking off his crown and binding his hair
properly, Jarasandha stood up like an ocean bursting its continents. Then the
monarch possessed of terrible prowess, addressing Bhima. said, 'I will fight
with thee. It is better to be vanquished by a superior person.' And saying
this, Jarasandha, rushed with great energy at Bhimasena. And Bhimasena, on whose
behalf the gods had been invoked by Krishna, having consulted with advanced
towards Jarasandha, impelled by the desire of fight. Then they, with their bare
arms as their only weapons, cheerfully engaged themselves in the encounter,
each desirous of vanquishing the other. And seizing each other's arms and
twining each other's legs, at times they slapped their arm-pits, causing the
enclosure to tremble at the sound. And frequently seizing each other's necks
with their hands and dragging and pushing it with violence, and each pressing
every limb of his body against every limb of the other, they continued, to slap
their arm-pits at time. And sometimes stretching their arms and sometimes
drawing them close, and now raising them up and now dropping them down, they
began to seize each other. And striking neck against neck and forehead against
forehead, they caused fiery sparks to come out like flashes of lightning. And
grasping each other in various ways by means of their arms, and kicking each
other with such violence as to affect the innermost nerves, they struck at each
other's breasts with clenched fists. With bare arms as their only weapons
roaring like clouds they grasped and struck each other like two mad elephants
encountering each other with their trunks. Incensed at each other's blow, they
fought on dragging and pushing each other and fiercely looking at each other
like two wrathful lions. And each striking every limb of the other with his own
and using his arms also against the other, and catching hold of each other's
waist, they hurled each other to a distance. Accomplished in wrestling, the two
heroes clasping each other with their arms and each dragging the other unto
himself, began to press each other with great violence. The heroes then
performed those grandest of all feats in wrestling called Prishtabhanga, which
consisted in throwing each other down with face towards the earth and
maintaining the one knocked down in that position as long as possible. And
employing his arms, each also performed the feats called Sampurna-murchcha and
Purna-kumbha. At times they twisted each other's arms and other limbs as if
these were vegetable fibres that were to be twisted into chords. And with
clenched fists they struck each other at times, pretending to aim at particular
limbs while the blows descended upon other parts of the body. It was thus that
those heroes fought with each other. The citizens consisting of thousands, of Brahmanas,
Kshatriyas and Vaisyas and Sudras, and even women and the aged, came out and
gathered there to behold the fight. And the crowd became so great that it was
one solid mass of humanity with no space between body and body. The sound the
wrestlers made by the slapping of their arms, the seizing of each other's necks
for bringing each other down, and the grasping of each other's legs for dashing
each other to the ground, became so loud that it resembled the roar of thunder or
of falling cliffs. Both of them were foremost of mighty men, and both took great
delight in such encounter. Desirous of vanquishing the other, each was on the
alert for taking advantage of the slightest lapse of the other. And, the mighty
Bhima and Jarasandha fought terribly on in those lists, driving the crowd at
times by the motions of their hands. Thus two heroes, dragging each other forward
and pressing each other backward and with sudden jerks throwing each other face
downward and sideways, mangled each other dreadfully. And at times they struck
each other with their knee-joints. And addressing each other loudly in stinging
speeches, they struck each other with clenched fists, the blows descending like
a mass of stone upon each other. With broad shoulders and long arms and both
well-skilled in wrestling encounters, they struck each other with those long
arms of theirs that were like maces of iron. That encounter of the heroes commenced
on the first lunar day of the month of Kartic (October) and the illustrious
heroes fought on without intermission and food, day and night, till the thirteenth
lunar day. It was on the night of the fourteenth of the lunar fortnight that
the monarch of Magadha desisted from fatigue. And Janardana beholding the
monarch tired, addressed Bhima of terrible deeds, and as if to stimulate him
said,--'O son of Kunti, a foe that is fatigued cannot be pressed for if pressed
at such a time he may even die. Therefore, O son of Kunti, this king should not
be oppressed by thee. On the other hand, fight with him With thy arms, putting
forth as much strength only as thy antagonist hath now left!' Then Bhima, thus
addressed by Krishna, understood the plight of Jarasandha and forthwith
resolved upon taking his life. And Bhima, desirous of vanquishing the hitherto
unvanquished Jarasandha, mustered all his strength and courage."
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