Virāṭa-parva Adhyāya 42 — Duryodhana’s counsel to Bhīṣma on ajñātavāsa risk and raid strategy
इमे च कस्य नाराचा: साहस्रा लोमवाहिनः: । समन्तात् कलधौताग्रा उपासंगे हिरण्मये
uttara uvāca | ime ca kasya nārācāḥ sāhasrā lomavāhinaḥ | samantāt kaladhautāgrā upāsaṅge hiraṇmaye |
Uttara said: “Whose are these arrows—numbering in the thousands—each fitted with feathers? Their tips are gilded all around, and they are stored in this golden quiver. For whose use are they?”
उत्तर उवाच
The verse highlights discernment and responsibility in the use of power: Uttara’s questioning underscores that weapons are not neutral possessions—they belong to someone with a purpose and must be understood in context before being taken up.
In the Virāṭa episode, Uttara notices a large stock of finely made, gilded, feathered arrows kept in a golden quiver and asks whose weapons they are and for whom they are intended—setting up the revelation of the true warrior behind them.