Adhyāya 65: Dawn Assembly, Makara–Śyena Vyūhas, and Commander Engagements
उनके शिरों, बाजूबन्दविभूषित भुजाओं और अंकुशोंसहित हाथोंके गिरनेसे ऐसा जान पड़ता था, मानो आकाशसे ओले और पत्थरोंकी वर्षा हो रही हो ।।
sañjaya uvāca |
teṣāṃ śirobāhubandha-vibhūṣita-bhujānām aṅkuśa-sahitānāṃ hastānāṃ nipātāt tathā pratibhāti sma yathā nabhaso hailāśmavarṣaḥ syāt ||
hatottamāṅgāḥ skandheṣu gajānāṃ gajayodhinaḥ |
adṛśyantācalāgreṣu drumā bhagnaśikhā iva ||
Sañjaya said: As the warriors’ heads and arms—adorned with armlets—and even the elephant-goads in their hands fell away, it seemed as though hail and stones were raining from the sky. And the elephant-fighters, though their heads had been severed, were still seen propped upon the shoulders of their elephants—like trees on mountain peaks whose tops have been broken off.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the stark impermanence of bodily power and martial glory: ornaments, weapons, and even the body itself are reduced to falling fragments in war. It implicitly warns that violence strips away human dignity and that worldly distinctions collapse under the force of death and fate.
Sañjaya describes a fierce battlefield moment where severed heads, arms with armlets, and hands holding elephant-goads fall in such numbers that it resembles a shower of hailstones. He then depicts elephant-mounted fighters whose heads have been cut off yet whose torsos remain braced on the elephants’ shoulders, appearing like top-broken trees standing on mountain peaks.