Karṇa-parva Adhyāya 19 — Saṃśaptaka–Trigarta Assault and Aindra-astra Counter
द्विपस्य पादाग्रकरान् स पञठ्चभि- नपस्य बाहू च शिरो<5थ च त्रिभि: | जघान षड्भि: षडनुत्तमत्विष: स पाण्ड्यराजानुचरान् महारथान्
sañjaya uvāca |
dvipasya pādāgrakarān sa pañcabhir
napasya bāhū ca śiro 'tha ca tribhiḥ |
jaghāna ṣaḍbhiḥ ṣaḍ-anuttama-tviṣaḥ
sa pāṇḍya-rājānucarān mahārathān ||
قال سنجيا: بخمسة سهام قطع قدمي الفيل الأماميتين وخرطومه. ثم بثلاثة سهام فصل ذراعي ملك البانديا ورأسه عن الجسد. وبعد ذلك، بستة سهام، قتل أيضًا ستة من عظماء فرسان العربة—رجالًا ذوي بهاءٍ رفيع—كانوا يتبعون ملك البانديا من خلفه.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the moral strain of war: even within kṣatriya duty, victory often comes through overwhelming force and technical mastery, prompting reflection on how dharma operates amid large-scale violence and the dehumanizing momentum of battle.
In Sañjaya’s report from the battlefield, a warrior (implied by context) first disables a war-elephant by cutting its forefeet and trunk with five arrows, then kills the Pāṇḍya king by severing his arms and head with three arrows, and finally slays six accompanying elite chariot-warriors with six more arrows.