Śikhaṇḍinī’s Disclosure, Drupada’s Counsel, and the Petition to Yakṣa Sthūṇākarṇa
Udyoga Parva 192
जहास सस्वनं हासं वाक््यं चेदमुवाच ह । न हि यावद् रणे पार्थ बाणशड्खधनुर्धरम्
sañjaya uvāca | jahāsa sasvanaṃ hāsaṃ vākyaṃ cedam uvāca ha | na hi yāvad raṇe pārtha bāṇaśaṅkhadhanurdharam |
ভীষ্মই গম্ভীৰ ধ্বনিসহ হাঁহি উঠি এই বাক্য ক’লে—“হে পাৰ্থ! যেতিয়ালৈকে তই ৰণভূমিত বাণ, শঙ্খ আৰু ধনু ধাৰণ কৰা জনক নেদেখিছ…”
संजय उवाच
The verse frames an ethical caution: confidence in war must be grounded in reality, not in boastful speech. Pride before facing the true measure of an opponent is portrayed as empty and potentially self-deceptive.
Sañjaya narrates that Bhīṣma laughs loudly and begins a pointed reply addressed to Pārtha (Arjuna), setting up a rebuke of premature bravado—spoken in the context of battlefield claims and vows.