Adhyāya 14: Sudēṣṇā Sends Sairandhrī to Kīcaka’s House (सुदेष्णा–सैरन्ध्री–कीचक संवादः)
प्रविष्टा ह्मसितापाज्धि प्रचण्डाश्षण्डदारुणा: । अत्युन्मादसमारम्भा: प्रीत्युन्मादकरा मम | आत्मप्रदानसम्भोगैर्मामुद्धर्तुमिहाहसि
vaiśampāyana uvāca | praviṣṭā hmasitāpājdhi pracaṇḍāśṣaṇḍadāruṇāḥ | aty-unmāda-samārambhāḥ prīty-unmāda-karā mama | ātma-pradāna-sambhogair mām uddhartum ihāhasi |
प्रविष्टा हृदयेऽस्मिन्धि प्रचण्डाः खण्डदारुणाः । अत्युन्मादसमारम्भाः प्रीत्युन्मादकरा मम । आत्मप्रदानसम्भोगैर्मामुद्धर्तुमिहार्हसि ॥
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse foregrounds how unchecked desire can overwhelm discernment, using the imagery of Kāma’s arrows to depict psychological and bodily agitation; it also frames ‘self-surrender’ as the sought remedy, revealing the ethical tension between impulse and restraint within human relationships.
A speaker (reported by Vaiśampāyana) addresses a ‘moon-faced’ woman, describing being struck by the fierce arrows of love and pleading that she alone can save him through intimate union—an intense erotic appeal expressed through martial metaphors.