अध्याय ९९ — युयुधान-दुःशासन-युद्धम्
Chapter 99: Sātyaki and Duḥśāsana’s engagement
हयांश्वैव चतुःषष्ट्या शराणां जध्निवान् बली | ध्वजं क्षत्रं च भल्लाभ्यां तथा तौ पार्ष्णिसारथी
hayāṁś caiva catuḥṣaṣṭyā śarāṇāṁ jadhnivān balī | dhvajaṁ kṣatraṁ ca bhallābhyāṁ tathā tau pārṣṇisārathī ||
Sañjaya berkata: Sang kesatria perkasa menewaskan kuda-kuda itu dengan enam puluh empat anak panah; dan dengan dua anak panah bermata lebar ia menebas panji serta payung kebesaran—demikianlah sais kereta yang teguh itu.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the kṣatriya ideal of resolute, disciplined prowess in battle: not merely harming opponents, but strategically disabling mobility (horses) and undermining morale and identity (banner) and protection (armor). Ethically, it reflects the Mahābhārata’s recurring tension—skill and duty in war coexist with the grave cost of violence.
Sañjaya reports a combat episode in which a powerful warrior shoots a precise volley of sixty-four arrows to bring down the chariot’s horses, then uses two bhalla arrows to cut down the enemy’s banner and armor, signaling a decisive tactical and symbolic blow.