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 said: With a hundred (warriors) he struck down Citrasena, and likewise with ten he overcame Duḥsaha—marking the relentless, escalating tempo of the battle where prowess is measured in swift, decisive subjugation rather than restraint.
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.