कर्णपुत्रवधः (The Fall of Vṛṣasena) — Karṇa Parva, Adhyāya 62
तथैव राजा राधेयं प्रत्यविध्यत् स्तनान्तरे । शरैस्त्रिभिश्व यन्तारं चतुर्भिश्चतुरो हयान्
tathaiva rājā rādheyaṁ pratyavidhyat stanāntare | śarais tribhiś ca yantāraṁ caturbhiś caturō hayān ||
ฝ่ายพระราชา ยุธิษฐิระ ก็ทำฉันนั้นเหมือนกัน ทรงยิงราธेय (กรรณะ) เข้าที่กลางอกอย่างลึก แล้วทรงยิงสารถีด้วยศร ๓ ดอก และยิงม้าทั้งสี่ด้วยศรอีก ๔ ดอก
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights a hard-edged dimension of kṣatriya conduct in war: effectiveness often comes from disabling the opponent’s means of fighting (charioteer and horses) as well as confronting the warrior directly. It invites reflection on how dharma in battle can involve strategic necessity while still raising ethical tension about targeting supporting agents.
During the battle, Yudhiṣṭhira shoots Karna in the chest. He then follows up by striking Karna’s charioteer with three arrows and wounding the four horses with four arrows, aiming to weaken Karna’s mobility and control of the chariot.