अध्याय २९: कर्णस्य शल्यं प्रति शापस्मरणं च युद्धनिश्चयः | Chapter 29: Karṇa recalls curses to Śalya and declares resolve for battle
परिघमुसलशक्तितोमरै- नखरभुशुण्डिगदाशतैहता: । द्विरदनरहया: सहस्रशो रुधिरनदीप्रवहास्तदाभवन्
sañjaya uvāca | parigha-muśala-śakti-tomarair nakhara-bhuśuṇḍi-gadā-śatair hatāḥ | dvirada-nara-hayāḥ sahasraśo rudhira-nadī-pravahās tadābhavan ||
Sañjaya disse: Então, abatidos por centenas de golpes de clavas de ferro, pilões (mūsala), lanças (śakti), dardos (tomara), armas semelhantes a garras, bhuśuṇḍīs e maças (gadā), milhares e milhares de elefantes, homens e cavalos tombaram—até que o campo de batalha pareceu verter correntes como rios de sangue. O verso ressalta o peso moral da guerra: quando o dharma colapsa em violência sem freio, a vitória é comprada ao custo de um sofrimento imenso e indiscriminado.
संजय उवाच
The verse functions as a stark ethical reminder: warfare, even when framed as kṣatriya-duty, unleashes vast suffering that can overwhelm any claim of glory. By depicting 'rivers of blood,' the text presses the listener to recognize the human (and animal) cost when conflict escalates beyond restraint and dharma is strained.
Sañjaya reports the intensity of the fighting: countless elephants, warriors, and horses are cut down by repeated strikes from multiple kinds of weapons, and the slaughter is so great that blood is imagined as flowing like rivers across the battlefield.