Droṇa–Dhṛṣṭadyumna-yuddha (द्रोण-धृष्टद्युम्न-युद्धम्) — Tactical duel and allied interventions
ततो दन्तिसहस्राणि रथानां चापि मारिष | अश्वौघा: पुरुषौघाश्व विपरीतं समाययु:
tato dantisahasrāṇi rathānāṃ cāpi māriṣa | aśvaughāḥ puruṣaughāś ca viparītaṃ samāyayuḥ, ārya |
Sañjaya said: Then, O venerable one, thousands of elephants and chariots, and also masses of cavalry and masses of infantry, abandoning the earlier order of single combats, surged together in a confused, contrary manner—so that all fought against all.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how quickly agreed rules of combat can collapse under the pressure of war: when order and restraint fail, violence becomes indiscriminate. It implicitly contrasts dharma-based, regulated fighting with the ethical danger of chaotic, all-against-all slaughter.
Sañjaya reports that large formations—elephants, chariots, cavalry, and infantry—converge and begin fighting in a mixed, disorderly way, violating the previously described sequence or arrangement of duels and ranks.