निशितैरिषुभि: कर्ण पञ्चाशद्धिः समार्पयत् महाराज! इससे कुपित हुए धर्मपुत्र युधिष्ठिरने कर्णपर पचास पैने बाणोंका प्रहार किया
sañjaya uvāca | niśitair iṣubhiḥ karṇa pañcāśadbhiḥ samārpayat | mahārāja! tataḥ kupito dharmaputro yudhiṣṭhiraḥ karṇam prati pañcāśat tīkṣṇaiḥ bāṇaiḥ prāharat |
Sañjaya said: O King, he struck Karṇa with fifty sharp arrows. Enraged by this, Dharmaputra Yudhiṣṭhira retaliated against Karṇa, showering him with fifty keen shafts. The exchange reflects the war’s grim reciprocity: anger answers injury, and even the righteous are drawn into measured violence amid the demands of battle.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how quickly anger can overtake even a dharmic character in the heat of war, turning conflict into reciprocal escalation; it implicitly warns that righteousness is hardest to preserve amid injury and provocation.
In the Karna Parva battle scene, Karna is struck with fifty sharp arrows; Yudhishthira, angered, responds by striking Karna with fifty keen arrows in return.