ते भिन्नदेहा व्यसवो निपेतु: कर्णेषुभिर्भूमितले स्वनन्त: । क्रुद्धेन सिंहेन यथेभयूथा महावने भीमबलेन तद्वत्
te bhinnadehā vyasavo nipetuḥ karṇeṣubhir bhūmitalē svanantaḥ | kruddhena siṁhena yathebhayūthā mahāvane bhīmabalenā tadvāt ||
Sañjaya dijo: Sus cuerpos, destrozados, y su aliento vital extinguido, cayeron al suelo; al golpear la tierra tintinearon sus adornos de oreja—como manadas de elefantes en un vasto bosque abatidas por un león enfurecido de fuerza terrible.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the fragility of embodied life amid war: even the mighty fall when confronted by superior force. Ethically, it functions as a sobering reflection on the consequences of violence—glory and ornamentation become meaningless when life is extinguished.
Sañjaya describes warriors collapsing dead on the battlefield, their earrings clinking as they hit the ground. He intensifies the scene with a simile: like elephant herds felled in a great forest by an enraged, powerful lion.