कर्णेन युधिष्ठिरानीकविदारणम् / Karṇa’s Breach of Yudhiṣṭhira’s Battle-Line
गड़ा सरस्वती सिन्धुर्धुमाकाशमेव च । उपस्करो रथस्यासन्नाप: सर्वाश्ष निम्नगा:
gaḍā sarasvatī sindhur dhūmākāśam eva ca | upaskaro rathasyāsann āpaḥ sarvāś ca nimnagāḥ ||
Duryodhana dijo: “La maza se volvió Sarasvatī; el Sindhu también estaba allí; e incluso el cielo humeante ocupó su lugar. Los herrajes y ataduras de aquel carro eran el agua misma, y todos los ríos que descienden.”
दुर्योधन उवाच
The verse uses hyperbolic, cosmic imagery to show how war distorts values: even sacred, life-sustaining waters and rivers are imagined as mere chariot-gear. It implicitly warns that adharma-driven conflict can turn the natural and sacred order into instruments of destruction.
Duryodhana describes a terrifying battlefield vision in which elements of nature—rivers, water, and a smoke-darkened sky—are poetically mapped onto parts of a warrior’s equipment and chariot, intensifying the sense of overwhelming, world-consuming warfare.