अध्याय २९: कर्णस्य शल्यं प्रति शापस्मरणं च युद्धनिश्चयः | Chapter 29: Karṇa recalls curses to Śalya and declares resolve for battle
कमलदिनकरेन्दुसंनि भै: सितदशनै: सुमुखाक्षिनासिक: । रुचिरमुकुटकुण्डलैर्मही पुरुषशिरोभिरुपस्तृता बभौ
sañjaya uvāca |
kamala-dinakarendu-sannibhaiḥ sita-daśanaiḥ sumukha-akṣi-nāsikaiḥ |
rucira-mukuṭa-kuṇḍalaiḥ mahī-puruṣa-śirobhir upastṛtā babhau ||
サンジャヤは言った。そのとき、人の首が散り敷かれた戦場は、奇怪でおぞましい輝きを帯びた。勇士たちの切り落とされた首は、蓮華のように、太陽のように、月のように光り、白い歯はきらめき、顔—眼も鼻も残したまま—なお美しく見え、愛らしい冠と耳飾りで飾られていた。
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical dissonance of war: beauty (lotus-, sun-, moon-like radiance; ornaments) becomes grotesque when attached to death. It implicitly warns that violence can distort values, making even splendor a sign of moral catastrophe.
Sañjaya narrates to Dhṛtarāṣṭra the scene on the battlefield: the ground is covered with severed heads of warriors, still bearing crowns and earrings, creating an eerie, dreadful 'splendor' amid carnage.