Kurukṣetra-anudarśanam — Rāma-hradāḥ and the Question of Kṣatra Continuity (शान्ति पर्व, अध्याय ४८)
चितासहस्प्रचितं वर्मशस्त्रसमाकुलम् । आपानभूमिं कालस्य तथा भुक्तोज्झितामिव
citāsahasrapracitaṁ varmaśastrasamākulam | āpānabhūmiṁ kālasya tathā bhuktojjhitām iva ||
Vaiśampāyana said: The ground was heaped with thousands of funeral pyres, and it lay choked with armor and weapons. To the eye it seemed like the very dining-ground of Time (Death)—as though Kāla had feasted there and then left the place strewn with its grim remnants. The image frames the battlefield’s aftermath as a moral warning: violence culminates in a landscape where human pride and power are reduced to refuse before the inevitability of Kāla.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse uses stark imagery to teach that war’s glory collapses into ruin under Kāla: weapons and armor become meaningless debris, and mass death turns the earth into a place of consumption for Time. It supports the Śānti-parvan’s ethical turn toward restraint, reflection, and dispassion after violence.
Vaiśampāyana describes a devastated ground covered with countless funeral pyres and littered with armor and weapons. The scene is likened to the dining-ground of Kāla, as if Death has ‘eaten’ there and left the leftovers—an evocative portrayal of the post-battle landscape.