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Shloka 51

उद्योगपर्व — अध्याय १४० (कृष्णेन कर्णं प्रति पाण्डवबल-वैशिष्ट्यप्रदर्शनम्) / Udyoga Parva, Chapter 140

Krishna’s appraisal of Pandava advantage and war portents

रुदत्य: सह गान्धार्या श्वगृध्रकुरराकुले । स यज्ञेडस्मिन्नवभूथो भविष्यति जनार्दन

rudatyaḥ saha gāndhāryā śvagṛdhrakurarākule | sa yajñe 'sminn avabhūtho bhaviṣyati janārdana ||

O Janārdana—when Gāndhārī weeps amid a tumult thronged with dogs, vultures, and kurara-birds, this battle will become the concluding purificatory bath (avabhṛtha) of this sacrifice.

रुदत्यःcrying, weeping
रुदत्यः:
Karta
TypeAdjective
Rootरुदत् (√रुद्)
FormFeminine, Nominative, Plural
सहtogether with
सह:
Karana
TypeIndeclinable
Rootसह
गान्धार्याwith Gandhārī
गान्धार्या:
Karana
TypeNoun
Rootगान्धारी
FormFeminine, Instrumental, Singular
श्वगृध्रकुरराकुलेin (a place) crowded with dogs, vultures, and ospreys
श्वगृध्रकुरराकुले:
Adhikarana
TypeAdjective
Rootश्व + गृध्र + कुरर + आकुल
FormNeuter, Locative, Singular
सःhe
सः:
Karta
TypePronoun
Rootतद्
FormMasculine, Nominative, Singular
यज्ञेin the sacrifice
यज्ञे:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootयज्ञ
FormMasculine, Locative, Singular
अस्मिन्in this
अस्मिन्:
Adhikarana
TypePronoun
Rootइदम्
FormMasculine, Locative, Singular
अवभूथःthe concluding bath (avabhṛtha)
अवभूथः:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootअवभूथ
FormMasculine, Nominative, Singular
भविष्यतिwill be, will happen
भविष्यति:
TypeVerb
Root√भू
FormSimple Future (Luṭ), 3rd, Singular
जनार्दनO Janārdana
जनार्दन:
TypeNoun
Rootजनार्दन
FormMasculine, Vocative, Singular

कर्ण उवाच

K
Karna
G
Gandhari
J
Janardana (Krishna)
D
dogs
V
vultures
K
kurara (osprey/fish-eagle)
Y
yajña (sacrifice)
A
avabhṛtha (concluding bath)

Educational Q&A

The verse frames impending war through ritual metaphor: what is called a ‘sacrifice’ culminates not in sanctity but in a grim ‘avabhṛtha’ amid carrion-birds and mourning. It highlights the ethical cost of violence and the tragic inversion of dharmic ideals when conflict is pursued.

Karna addresses Kṛṣṇa (Janārdana), foreseeing the battlefield’s aftermath: Gāndhārī’s lamentation and a scene swarming with dogs and scavenger birds. He declares that this horrific scene will serve as the ‘concluding bath’ of the figurative sacrifice—i.e., the war’s completion.