Duryodhana-śibira-praveśaḥ — The Pāṇḍavas Enter the Kaurava Camp; The Burning of Arjuna’s Chariot
व्यंसनेनाश्वसेनस्य पन्नगेन्द्रस्थ वै पुन: । पुनश्न पतिते चक्रे व्यसनार्त: पराजित:
vyaṁsanenāśvasenasya pannagendrāstha vai punaḥ | punaś ca patite cakre vyasanārtaḥ parājitaḥ ||
Sekali lagi, ketika Aśvasena—yang menunggangi raja para ular—terjatuh, dan cakra itu pun kembali terlepas dan jatuh, ia diliputi malapetaka dan berdiri dalam kekalahan.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the fragility of martial power: when one’s supports (mount, allies) and instruments (weapons) fail—especially repeatedly—confidence and capacity collapse. It points to the ethical realism of the epic: valor alone does not guarantee success; conditions, fortune, and prior causes (karma) also shape outcomes.
Sañjaya reports that Aśvasena, riding upon the serpent-king, suffers another setback; simultaneously the discus (cakra) falls again. Struck by this repeated misfortune, Aśvasena becomes distressed and is described as defeated.