🪷 ŚB 7.2.29-31
Sanskrit, transliteration, word meanings, and translation for steady Bhāgavata reading.
Sanskrit
Transliteration
Synonyms
Translation
His golden, bejeweled armor smashed, his ornaments and garlands fallen from their places, his hair scattered and his eyes lusterless, the slain King lay on the battlefield, his entire body smeared with blood, his heart pierced by the arrows of the enemy. When he died he had wanted to show his prowess, and thus he had bitten his lips, and his teeth remained in that position. His beautiful lotuslike face was now black and covered with dust from the battlefield. His arms, with his sword and other weapons, were cut and broken. When the queens of the King of Uśīnara saw their husband lying in that position, they began crying, “O lord, now that you have been killed, we also have been killed.” Repeating these words again and again, they fell down, pounding their breasts, at the feet of the dead King.
Bhāgavatam Detail Source-Anchor Spine
This reading page exposes the requested verse-reference route, canonical received passage, parent chapter/skandha context, and the wider Bhāgavata source spine without inventing artificial verse boundaries.
Navigation
- ← Previous passage · ŚB 7.2.28
- Next passage · ŚB 7.2.32 →
- Full chapter · ŚB 7.2
- Skandha 7 chapter index
- Śrīmad Bhāgavatam master index
🪷 ॐ नमो भगवते वासुदेवाय 🪷