Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 886

अध्याय १४८ — कर्णप्रभावः, धृष्टद्युम्नस्य विरथता, तथा घटोत्कच-आह्वानम्

Chapter 148: Karṇa’s Pressure, Dhṛṣṭadyumna Unhorsed, and the Summoning of Ghaṭotkaca

आनाभि निरमज्जंक्ष रथचक्राणि शोणिते । समस्त प्राणियोंके प्रॉलयकालके समान जब वह महाभीषण अत्यन्त दारुण महान्‌ एवं दुर्लड़घ्य संग्राम चल रहा था, उस समय रक्तकी वर्षासे और वायुके वेगपूर्वक चलनेसे रुधिरसे भीगे हुए धरातलकी धूल शान्त हो गयी। रथके पहिये नाभितक खूनमें डूबे हुए थे

sañjaya uvāca | ānābhi niramajjakṣa rathacakrāṇi śoṇite | samasta-prāṇināṁ pralaya-kāla-samāne yadā sa mahābhīṣaṇo 'tyanta-dāruṇo mahān durlaṅghyaś ca saṅgrāmo vartamāna āsīt, tadā raktavarṣeṇa vāyoś ca vegena rudhira-sikta-dharātala-rajo 'pi śāntaṁ babhūva | rathasya cakrāṇi nābhi-paryantaṁ rakte nimagnāni āsan |

ສັນຊະຍະ ກ່າວວ່າ: ລໍ້ລົດຮົບຈົມລົງໃນເລືອດຈົນເຖິງດຸມລໍ້. ໃນຂະນະທີ່ການຮົບອັນໃຫຍ່ຫຼວງ ນ່າສະພຶງກົວ ແລະໂຫດຮ້າຍຢ່າງຫຼາຍ—ຍາກຈະຂ້າມຜ່ານດັ່ງເວລາແຫ່ງການລ້າງຜານຂອງສັດທັງປວງ—ກຳລັງຄຸກຄາມຢູ່ນັ້ນ, ຝົນເລືອດແລະລົມພັດແຮງໄດ້ເຮັດໃຫ້ຝຸ່ນດິນເທິງພື້ນດິນທີ່ຊຸ່ມເລືອດສົງບົບລົງ. ລໍ້ລົດຮົບຈົມໃນເລືອດຈົນເຖິງດຸມລໍ້.

आनाभिup to the naves (axles)
आनाभि:
Adhikarana
TypeIndeclinable
Rootआ + नाभि
FormAvyaya (indeclinable adverbial)
निरमज्जन्they sank / were immersed
निरमज्जन्:
Kriya
TypeVerb
Rootनि + मज्ज्
FormImperfect (लङ्), 3rd person, plural, parasmaipada
and
:
TypeIndeclinable
Root
FormAvyaya
रथचक्राणिthe chariot-wheels
रथचक्राणि:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootरथचक्र
FormNeuter, nominative, plural
शोणितेin blood
शोणिते:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootशोणित
FormNeuter, locative, singular

संजय उवाच

S
Sanjaya
C
chariot
C
chariot-wheels
B
blood (śoṇita/rudhira)
W
wind (vāyu)
E
earth/ground (dharātala)
D
dust (rajas)

Educational Q&A

The verse uses pralaya-like imagery to show how unchecked warfare collapses ordinary moral and human limits; it implicitly warns that adharma-driven conflict produces collective ruin, where even nature (dust, wind, rain) seems to participate in the devastation.

Sanjaya describes the battlefield at a peak of carnage: blood is so abundant that chariot-wheels sink up to their hubs, and the dust on the ground—normally raised by movement—has settled because the earth is drenched with blood and driven by strong winds and a 'rain of blood.'