कवचं च ध्वजं चैव धनु: शक्ति्हया: शरा: । शरै: कृत्ता महेष्वास यतमानस्य संयुगे,“महाधनुर्धर! महाबाहो! मैं युद्धमें यत्नपूर्वक लगा हुआ था, किंतु कर्णने सारी सेनाके देखते-देखते अपने बाणोंद्वारा मेरे कवच, ध्वज, धनुष, शक्ति, घोड़े और बाणोंके टुकड़े- टुकड़े कर डाले हैं!
kavacaṃ ca dhvajaṃ caiva dhanuḥ śaktiṃ hayāḥ śarāḥ | śaraiḥ kṛttā maheṣvāsa yatamānasya saṃyuge ||
Sañjaya said: “O mighty archer, while I was striving with all my effort in the press of battle, Karṇa—before the very eyes of the army—shattered with his arrows my armour and banner, my bow, my spear, my horses, and even my arrows, cutting them to pieces.”
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the tension between human effort (yatna) and overpowering force on the battlefield: even a determined warrior can be undone when confronted by superior skill. Ethically, it underscores the Mahābhārata’s recurring reflection on kṣatriya-dharma—courage and persistence amid destructive consequences.
Sañjaya reports a battlefield moment in which Karṇa’s arrows visibly dismantle an opponent’s key martial supports—armour, standard, weapons, horses, and ammunition—signaling Karṇa’s dominance and the rapid reversal of a combatant’s capacity to fight.