Book, Chapter
1 1 | other princes in arms. The two youngest brothers, Nakula
2 1, 3| maces lifted high,~Like two cliffs with lofty turrets
3 1, 3| girded loins they stood,~Like two untamed jungle tuskers in
4 5, 4| thought intent,~Cleft in two her throbbing bosom as in
5 6, 6| pressed,~Elephants he gave two hundred, steeds seven thousand
6 8 | joined Duryodhan.~When the two armies were drawn up in
7 8, 1| cruel fate untimely fell two brothers young and good,~
8 10 | Drona, and held his own for two days. The great contest
9 10, 4| Duryodhan, in thy shame!"~Like two bulls that fight in fury
10 10, 4| wounds and oozing blood,~Like two wild and warring tuskers
11 12 | kings. All this is told in two Books containing about twenty-two
12 12, 3| the place of yajna stood,~Two were made of devadaru, pine
13 End | the ocean.~Then follow the two concluding Books of the
14 Epi | ancient Greece, boasts of two great Epics. One of them,
15 Epi | It is the first of these two Epics, the Iliad of Ancient
16 Epi | Sanscrit couplets in about two thousand English couplets.~
17 Epi | told in this translation in two books describing the funerals
18 Epi | exaggeration to state that the two hundred millions of Hindus
19 Epi | ideas of a nation numbering two hundred millions.~ROMESH
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