शकुनिवधः — Sahadeva’s Slaying of Śakuni
with Ulūka’s fall
तान् प्रेक्ष्य सहितान् सर्वान् जवेनोद्यतकार्मुकान् । सौबलोअभ्यद्रवद् युद्धे पाण्डवानाततायिन:
tān prekṣya sahitān sarvān javena udyata-kārmukān | saubalo 'bhyadravad yuddhe pāṇḍavān ātatāyinaḥ ||
Dijo Sañjaya: Al verlos a todos reunidos, avanzando con gran rapidez y con los arcos alzados, Saubala (Śakuni), en medio de la batalla, cargó contra los Pāṇḍavas—calificados aquí como agresores—en el campo de guerra.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how moral framing operates in war-narrative: the opposing side is labeled ātatāyin (“aggressor”), showing how ethical judgment and propaganda-like characterization accompany battlefield action, even as combat proceeds under kṣatriya norms.
Sañjaya reports that Śakuni (Saubala), seeing the Pāṇḍava forces advancing together with raised bows, rushes forward to engage them in battle.