Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 20

Varuṇābhiṣeka–Agni-anveṣaṇa–Kaubera-tīrtha

Varuṇa’s Consecration; Search for Agni; Kaubera Sacred Site

ख्याता दहदहा चैव तथा धमधमा नृप । खण्डखण्डा च राजेन्द्र पूषणा मणिकुट्टिका

khyātā dahadahā caiva tathā dhamadhamā nṛpa | khaṇḍakhaṇḍā ca rājendra pūṣaṇā maṇikuṭṭikā ||

వైశంపాయనుడు పలికెను—ఓ నృపా! ‘దహదహా’ మరియు ‘ధమధమా’ అనే పేర్లతో ప్రసిద్ధమైన (అస్త్రాలు) ఉన్నవి; ఓ రాజేంద్రా! ‘ఖండఖండా’, ‘పూషణా’, ‘మణికుట్టికా’ అనే (ఇతరాలు) కూడా ఉన్నవి.

ख्याताwell-known, famed
ख्याता:
Karta
TypeAdjective
Rootख्यात (ppp of √ख्या)
FormFeminine, Nominative, Singular
दहदहा‘dahadahā’ (a named sound/cry; onomatopoeia)
दहदहा:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootदहदहा (onomatopoetic noun)
FormFeminine, Nominative, Singular
and
:
TypeIndeclinable
Root
एवindeed, just
एव:
TypeIndeclinable
Rootएव
तथाlikewise, so
तथा:
TypeIndeclinable
Rootतथा
धमधमा‘dhamadhamā’ (a named sound/cry; onomatopoeia)
धमधमा:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootधमधमा (onomatopoetic noun)
FormFeminine, Nominative, Singular
नृपO king
नृप:
TypeNoun
Rootनृप
FormMasculine, Vocative, Singular
खण्डखण्डाbroken into pieces, fragmentary
खण्डखण्डा:
Karta
TypeAdjective
Rootखण्डखण्ड (reduplicated stem from खण्ड)
FormFeminine, Nominative, Singular
and
:
TypeIndeclinable
Root
राजेन्द्रO lord of kings
राजेन्द्र:
TypeNoun
Rootराजेन्द्र
FormMasculine, Vocative, Singular
पूषणाby Pūṣan (the Sun-god)
पूषणा:
Karana
TypeNoun
Rootपूषण
FormMasculine, Instrumental, Singular
मणिकुट्टिकाMaṇikuṭṭikā (a proper name; lit. ‘gem-crusher’)
मणिकुट्टिका:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootमणिकुट्टिका
FormFeminine, Nominative, Singular

वैशम्पायन उवाच

V
Vaiśampāyana
N
nṛpa (the king addressed)
D
Dahadahā
D
Dhamadhamā
K
Khaṇḍakhaṇḍā
P
Pūṣaṇā
M
Maṇikuṭṭikā

Educational Q&A

The verse functions as a stark reminder that war is not a single act but an expanding system of harm: even the named instruments of battle embody burning, pounding, and fragmentation, pointing to how violence proliferates and deepens suffering when dharma is eclipsed by hostility.

Vaiśampāyana is enumerating notable weapons or missiles present in the conflict, listing them by their traditional names—Dahadahā, Dhamadhamā, Khaṇḍakhaṇḍā, Pūṣaṇā, and Maṇikuṭṭikā—within the broader war narrative of the Śalya Parva.