उत्पातवर्णनम् (Utpāta-varṇanam) — Catalogue of Portents
महादोष: संनिपातस्तस्याद्य: क्षय उच्यते । परस्परज्ञा: संहृष्टा व्यवधूता: सुनिश्चिता:,युद्ध महान् दोषका भण्डार है। उन दोषोंमें सबसे प्रधान है जनसंहार। यदि एक दूसरेको जाननेवाले, हर्ष और उत्साहमें भरे रहनेवाले, कहीं भी आसक्त न होकर विजय- प्राप्तिका दृढ़ निश्चय रखनेवाले तथा शौर्यसम्पन्न पचास सैनिक भी हों तो वे बड़ी भारी सेनाको धूलमें मिला देते हैं। यदि पीछे पैर न हटानेवाले पाँच, छ: और सात ही योद्धा हों तो वे भी निश्चितरूपसे विजयी होते हैं
mahādoṣaḥ saṁnipātas tasyādyaḥ kṣaya ucyate | parasparajñāḥ saṁhṛṣṭā vyavadhūtāḥ suniścitāḥ ||
Vyāsa said: “In war, the massing together of forces becomes a great fault; and the foremost consequence of that fault is destruction—wholesale slaughter. But if even a small band of warriors—who know one another well, are filled with joy and ardor, are free from distracting attachments, and are firmly resolved upon victory—stand together in valor, they can grind down a far larger army. Even five, six, or seven heroes who do not turn back can, with certainty, prevail.”
व्यास उवाच
Vyāsa frames massed battle as a grave strategic and moral danger because its primary outcome is kṣaya—large-scale destruction. He then highlights the counter-principle: disciplined cohesion, mutual trust, detachment from distractions, and unwavering resolve can make a small, virtuous, well-knit unit more effective than a huge but less integrated host.
In the Bhīṣma Parva’s opening war context, Vyāsa offers counsel about the nature of warfare: he warns that the gathering of armies tends toward slaughter, yet he explains how a compact group of mutually known, enthusiastic, detached, and determined warriors can overcome a much larger force through unity and steadfast courage.