अर्जुनस्य गुरुधर्मविलापः तथा शैनेयकर्णयोर्युद्धारम्भः | Arjuna’s Lament on Guru-Dharma and the Opening of the Sātyaki–Karṇa Duel
चित्रसेनं शतेनैव दशभिर्दु:सहं तथा
citrasenaṁ śatenaiva daśabhir duḥsahaṁ tathā
Sañjaya dit : D’un cent (de traits/de coups) il abattit Citrasena, et de dix il dompta de même Duḥsaha—marquant le tempo inexorable, toujours plus vif, de la bataille, où la prouesse se mesure à la soumission prompte et décisive plutôt qu’à la retenue.
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores the Mahābhārata’s war-ethic tension: martial excellence and efficiency are praised within kṣatriya-duty, yet the narration also highlights how quickly violence scales, inviting reflection on the cost of glory and the moral weight of battlefield success.
Sañjaya reports rapid battlefield feats: Citrasena is overcome using 'a hundred' (commonly understood as a hundred arrows/strikes), and Duḥsaha is similarly subdued with 'ten,' conveying a sequence of swift defeats amid the Drona Parva fighting.