Adhyāya 18 — Sequential Duels and Formation Pressure
Ulūka–Yuyutsu; Śakuni–Sutasoma; Kṛpa–Dhṛṣṭadyumna; Kṛtavarmā–Śikhaṇḍin
साश्चपत्तिद्विपरथं महाशस्त्रौ्सम्प्लवम् | सहसा संतितीर्षन्तं पार्थ शस्त्रास्त्रसेतुना
sāśvapattidviparathaṁ mahāśastraughasamplavam | sahasā santitīrṣantaṁ pārtha śastrāstrasētunā ||
Sañjaya said: Arjuna (Pārtha), seeing that vast host—filled with horses, infantry, elephants, and chariots, and swollen like a flood with the torrent of great weapons—wished to cross that “ocean of the army” at once by means of a bridge made of his own missiles and weapons. At that moment Śrī Kṛṣṇa addressed him: “Blameless Pārtha, why do you trifle as if in play? First destroy these Saṁśaptakas, and then strive swiftly and resolutely for Karṇa’s fall.”
संजय उवाच
Even in heroic action, one should not be driven by showmanship or impulsive ‘play’; Kṛṣṇa’s counsel redirects Arjuna toward disciplined duty—remove immediate obstacles (the Saṁśaptakas) and pursue the decisive objective (Karṇa’s defeat) with urgency and moral seriousness.
Arjuna intends to break through a dense, weapon-filled enemy formation—likened to an ocean—by forging a path with his own weapons, as if building a bridge. Kṛṣṇa intervenes verbally, pressing him to stop treating the engagement lightly, first destroy the Saṁśaptakas who block him, and then move swiftly toward confronting and killing Karṇa.