भूमिशोभां करिष्यामि पातितै रथकुज्जरै: । “नाना प्रकारके बाणोंका प्रहार करके मैं शत्रुसैनिकोंको भयभीत कर दूँगा। धनुषको कानतक खींचकर छोड़े गये यमराष्ट्रवर्धक बाणोंद्वारा धराशायी किये गये रथों और हाथियोंसे रणभूमिकी शोभा बढ़ाऊँगा
sañjaya uvāca | bhūmiśobhāṃ kariṣyāmi pātitai rathakuñjaraiḥ |
Sañjaya said: “I shall enhance the splendour of the battlefield by bringing down chariots and elephants. With volleys of many kinds of arrows I shall strike terror into the enemy host; and with death-dealing shafts loosed after drawing the bow to the ear—arrows that swell the realm of Yama—I shall cast down chariots and elephants, adorning the field of war.”
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the warrior ethos that equates renown with martial devastation; within the Mahābhārata’s moral frame, it also invites reflection on how dharma becomes strained in war, when ‘splendour’ is claimed through the fall of chariots, elephants, and the lives behind them.
Sañjaya reports a combatant’s vow-like boast: he will make the battlefield appear ‘splendid’ by felling enemy chariots and elephants—an image of escalating, large-scale slaughter characteristic of the Karṇa Parva’s intense fighting.