Chapter 12: Arjuna’s suppression of the Saṃśaptakas and duel with Aśvatthāmā
Drauṇi
व्यपसृत्य तु नागाभ्यां मण्डलानि विचेरतु: । प्रगृह्ा चोभी धनुषी जध्नतुर्वे परस्परम्
vyapasṛtya tu nāgābhyāṃ maṇḍalāni viceratuḥ | pragṛhya cobhī dhanuṣī jaghnatur vai parasparam || tāv anyonyasya samare saṃchिद्य dhanuṣī śubhe | hatvā ca sārathī tūṛṇaṃ hayāṃś ca rathināṃ varī ||
サンジャヤは言った。象から身を退き、二人の戦士は円を描いて回り始めた。弓を取り、矢の雨をもって互いを撃ち合った。その戦いで、双方は相手の見事な弓を断ち切り、さらに車戦の第一人者はたちまち敵の御者と馬を討ち取った。
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how warfare tends to escalate: once direct exchanges begin, combatants aim not only to wound but to disable the opponent’s capacity to fight (breaking bows, killing charioteer and horses). Ethically, it reflects the harsh logic of kṣatriya-battle where victory is pursued through tactical dismantling, raising implicit questions about the cost of glory and the momentum of violence.
Two warriors withdraw from their elephants, circle tactically, and exchange arrow-strikes with bows. Each breaks the other’s bow; then the leading chariot-fighter quickly kills the opponent’s charioteer and horses, crippling the enemy chariot’s effectiveness.