Chapter 47: Krauñca-vyūha Deployment and Conch-Signals
Kaurava–Pāṇḍava Readiness
ऋते प्रायगतं राजन् न्यस्तशस्त्रमचेतनम् । हन्यान्मां युधि योधानां सत्यमेतद् ब्रवीमि ते
ṛte prāyagataṃ rājan nyastaśastram acetanam | hanyān māṃ yudhi yodhānāṃ satyam etad bravīmi te ||
أيها الملك، لا يقدر أحدٌ على قتلي إلا إذا أخذتُ نذر الصوم حتى الموت، وقد وضعتُ سلاحي وجلستُ كمن لا وعي له. ففي تلك الحال وحدها يستطيع محاربٌ من خيرة الفرسان أن يصرعني في ساحة القتال. هذا ما أقوله لك صدقًا.
युधिषछ्िर उवाच
The verse highlights a dharmic boundary in warfare: a warrior who has renounced fighting by laying down arms and undertaking a death-fast is no longer a proper target. Yudhiṣṭhira frames his vulnerability only in that renunciatory state, underscoring ideals of restraint, honor, and truthfulness even amid war.
Yudhiṣṭhira addresses a king and states that he cannot be slain in ordinary combat; only if he abandons weapons and sits for a fast unto death—appearing unconscious or withdrawn—could a great warrior kill him. He insists he is speaking truthfully, indicating a tense moment where questions of killing, surrender, and dharma are being weighed.