एकलव्यं हि साड्गुष्ठमशक्ता देवदानवा: । सराक्षसोरगा: पार्थ विजेतुं युधि करहिचित्
ekalavyaṃ hi sāḍguṣṭham aśaktā devadānavāḥ | sarākṣasoragāḥ pārtha vijetuṃ yudhi karhicit, kuntīkumāra! yadi ekalavyakā aṅguṣṭhaḥ surakṣitaḥ hotā to devatā, dānava, rākṣasa aura nāga—ye sab milakara bhī yuddha meṃ use kabhī parājita nahīṃ kara sakate the |
วายุกล่าวว่า “โอ้ปารถะ โอรสแห่งกุนตี—หากนิ้วหัวแม่มือของเอกลัพยะยังคงสมบูรณ์แล้ว แม้เหล่าเทพและอสูร พร้อมทั้งรากษสและพญานาค ก็ย่อมไม่อาจปราบเขาได้ในสงครามเลย”
श्रीवायुदेव उवाच
The verse highlights how extraordinary capability can be curtailed by a single imposed limitation, and it invites reflection on the ethics of restricting talent for the sake of maintaining an established order—especially in the context of war where such choices reshape destiny.
Vāyu addresses Arjuna, asserting that Ekalavya would have been unconquerable in battle—even by combined divine and demonic forces—if his thumb had not been taken, implicitly recalling the earlier episode where Ekalavya’s thumb was demanded as guru-dakṣiṇā.
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