1.3gb ... | Bajirao Mastani -2015- Hindi 720p Bluray
But the court was not so kind. Bajirao’s mother, Radhabai, was a Brahmin orthodox who saw Mastani as a Muslim (her mother was a court dancer of Persian origin). The priests called her a Yavani —a foreigner. The generals whispered that she was a spy.
Bajirao needed no second invitation. He rode north with 25,000 horsemen, crossing swollen rivers and dry ravines in a single breath. Maratha lightning, they called it. The siege of Bundelkhand was brutal. But inside the fort, a figure moved like a panther—Mastani, the Maharaja’s daughter. Trained in archery, spear-fighting, and statecraft, she had taken command of the eastern ramparts.
Mastani, forbidden from attending the funeral, walked into the river that night. Some say she died of a broken heart. Some say she walked into the water and never came out. Her son, Krishna Rao, was raised in hiding by faithful servants.
“I am never late, princess,” he replied, eyes gleaming in the torchlight. “I arrive exactly when destiny intends.” Bajirao Mastani -2015- Hindi 720p BluRay 1.3GB ...
“Yes,” Mastani replied. “But they also purify.”
“Jab tak hai jaan, tab tak tum mere. Jab jaan nahi, tab bhi mere.” (As long as I live, I am yours. When I am no more, still yours.)
Mastani stepped forward. She wore a peshwaj (a long coat) and a warrior’s necklace of tiger claws. She did not bow. She looked Bajirao in the eye and said: But the court was not so kind
“Then take what is more precious than any treasure,” the old king said. “Take my daughter. Not as a servant—as your equal.”
“I am the daughter of a king,” she said. “And the wife of a lion. Next time, aim for my heart—because I will aim for yours.”
He touched her face. “You were my greatest battle, Mastani. And my only defeat.” The generals whispered that she was a spy
“Bring her to the palace,” she said quietly. “If my husband has chosen a second wife, she will live under my roof.”
“Choose, Bajirao,” she said. “The throne—or the foreigner.”
Mastani bore the insults with a warrior’s silence. She learned Marathi. She prayed to Bhavani. But when a minister called her “the Peshwa’s concubine” in open court, she drew her dagger and pinned his turban to the wall.
Radhabai, meanwhile, conspired. She forbade Mastani from entering the main palace. She declared Mastani’s son, Krishna Rao, illegitimate. When Bajirao left for a campaign against the Siddis of Janjira, his mother locked Mastani in a garden pavilion—a beautiful prison. Bajirao returned from Janjira wounded—not by a sword, but by fever. He had ridden for seven days without sleep to see Mastani. But the palace gates were barred. Kashibai stood at the threshold, her hand on the lock.
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