Kuru-Sainika-Āśvāsana and Vijayaghoṣaṇa
Reassuring the Kuru Soldiers; Proclaiming Victory
छन्नमायोधन सर्व शरीरैर्गतचेतसाम् | गजाश्वसादिनां तत्र शितबाणात्तजीवितै:
channam āyodhanaṃ sarvaṃ śarīrair gata-cetasām | gajāśva-sādināṃ tatra śita-bāṇātta-jīvitaiḥ ||
Disse Vaiśampāyana: Em pouco tempo, todo o campo de batalha ficou coberto pelos corpos de homens que haviam perdido os sentidos. Ali, o chão jazia semeado de cadáveres de condutores de elefantes, cavaleiros e daqueles que caíram dos carros, com a vida ceifada por flechas agudas. Naquele momento, parecia que Arjuna, arco em punho, movia-se por toda parte como se dançasse no campo.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical gravity of warfare: extraordinary skill and victory are inseparable from widespread suffering and death. It implicitly invites reflection on kṣatriya-dharma—martial duty performed with resolve—while not hiding the tragic cost borne by living beings on the battlefield.
The narrator describes the battlefield after intense fighting: it is blanketed with unconscious bodies and corpses of mounted warriors and those fallen from chariots, killed by sharp arrows. Arjuna’s rapid, all-pervading movement with bow in hand is portrayed as if he were dancing across the field.