इन्द्रजिद्-लक्ष्मणयुद्धम्
Indrajit and Lakṣmaṇa: Escalation through Concealment
ततस्त्रिगर्त: सधनुरवतीर्य महारथात् । गदया चतुरो वाहान् राज्ञस्तस्य तदावधीत्,तदनन्तर धनुष हाथमें लिये त्रिगर्तराजने अपने विशाल रथसे उतरकर राजा युधिष्ठिरके चारों घोड़ोंको गदासे मार डाला
tatas trigartaḥ sadhanur avatīrya mahārathāt | gadayā caturo vāhān rājñas tasya tadā avadhīt |
Vaiśampāyana said: Then the Trigarta king, bow in hand, descended from his great chariot and, with his mace, struck down the four horses of that king (Yudhiṣṭhira) then and there. In the harsh ethic of battle, disabling an opponent’s mobility becomes a decisive tactic—yet it also heightens the moral tension of war, where victory is pursued through the destruction of the very supports of life and duty.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the grim pragmatics of kṣatriya warfare: victory often turns on disabling an enemy’s means of movement and protection. It implicitly raises ethical tension—martial duty permits harsh tactics, yet such acts intensify the suffering and moral weight carried by combatants.
The Trigarta king gets down from his chariot with bow in hand and uses a mace to kill the four horses of King Yudhiṣṭhira’s chariot, effectively immobilizing him in the battle.