Droṇa-parva Adhyāya 49: Yudhiṣṭhira’s Lament and Strategic Foreboding after Abhimanyu’s Fall
ततः सुबलदायादं कालिकेयमपोथयत् | जघान चास्यानुचरान् गान्धारान् सप्तसप्ततिम्,तदनन्तर उसने सुबलपुत्र कालिकेयको मार गिराया और उसके पीछे चलनेवाले सतहत्तर गान्धारोंका भी संहार कर डाला
tataḥ subaladāyādaṃ kālikeyam apothayat | jaghāna cāsyānucarān gāndhārān saptasaptatim |
قال سنجيا: ثم صرع كاليكِيَة، سليل سوبالا؛ وبعد ذلك قتل أيضًا أتباع كاليكِيَة—سبعةً وسبعين من محاربي غاندھارا—إذ كان زخم المعركة لا يلين.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how, in the Mahābhārata’s war ethic, combat unfolds through duty-bound action: warriors are identified by lineage and allegiance, and the narrative stresses the cascading consequences of battle—when a leader falls, his retinue is also destroyed.
Sañjaya reports that a warrior (implied by context) strikes down Kālikeya, described as Subala’s descendant, and then kills Kālikeya’s accompanying followers—seventy-seven Gandhāra fighters.