Sātyaki-praveśaḥ and Duryodhana-saṃnipātaḥ
Sātyaki’s passage and Duryodhana’s mass engagement
गर्जितोत्क्रुष्टसंनादा: शड्खदुन्दुभिनि:स्वना:
garjitotkruṣṭasaṃnādāḥ śaṅkhadundubhiniḥsvanāḥ
गर्जितोत्क्रुष्टसंनादाः शङ्खदुन्दुभिनिःस्वनाः।
संजय उवाच
The verse does not give a direct moral injunction; it frames the ethical tension of war by highlighting how collective enthusiasm and ritualized signals (conches, drums, victory-shouts) can propel people into violent action under the banner of duty. It invites reflection on how dharma in a battlefield context is accompanied by powerful social and emotional forces.
Sañjaya, narrating events to Dhṛtarāṣṭra, describes the battlefield soundscape: roaring cries and victory-shouts rise, while conches and war-drums reverberate—signaling mobilization, escalation, or the onset of a major clash in the Drona Parva.
Curious about the meaning, context, or a word? Ask, and continue the conversation in the Vedapath app.
A free Google sign-in keeps your chat saved across web and the app.
Read Mahabharata in the Vedapath app
Scan the QR code to open this directly in the app, with audio, word-by-word meanings, and more.