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Shloka 5

कोई प्रसन्न था तो कोई भयभीत। कोई विषादग्रस्त था तो कोई आश्वर्यवकित तथा दूसरे बहुत-से लोग शोकसे मृतप्राय हो रहे थे। आपके और शत्रुपक्षके सैनिकोंमेंसे जिसकी जैसी प्रकृति थी, वे परस्पर उसी भावमें मग्न थे ।।

praviddha-varmābharaṇāmbara-āyudhaṁ dhanañjayenābhihataṁ mahaujasam | niśāmya karṇaṁ kuravaḥ pradudruvuḥ hata-ṛṣabhā gāva ivājane vane ||

Sinabi ni Sañjaya: Nang makita nilang si Karṇa—makapangyarihan—ay pinabagsak ni Dhanañjaya, at nagkalat ang kanyang baluti, mga palamuti, kasuotan, at mga sandata, nabasag ang hanay ng mga Kuru at nagsitakbo, gaya ng kawan ng baka na nawalan ng punong toro, nagwawala sa takot sa isang gubat na walang tao.

{'praviddha''scattered, flung away, cast about', 'varman (varmā)': 'armor, protective mail', 'ābharaṇa': 'ornament, decoration', 'ambara': 'garment, clothing', 'āyudha': 'weapon', 'dhanañjaya': 'Arjuna (the conqueror of wealth), epithet of Arjuna', 'abhihata': 'struck, smitten, wounded', 'mahā-ojas / mahaujasam': 'of great vigor, great might, powerful', 'niśāmya': 'having seen, observing', 'karṇa': 'Karna', 'kuravaḥ': 'the Kurus (Kaurava side warriors)', 'pradudruvuḥ': 'they ran away, fled', 'hata-ṛṣabha': 'whose bull-leader is slain
{'praviddha':
bereft of the leading bull', 'gāvaḥ''cows, cattle', 'iva': 'like, as', 'ājane': 'in a lonely/trackless place
bereft of the leading bull', 'gāvaḥ':
in solitude', 'vane''in the forest'}
in solitude', 'vane':

संजय उवाच

S
Sañjaya
K
Karna
D
Dhanañjaya (Arjuna)
K
Kuravaḥ (Kuru/Kaurava warriors)
F
Forest (vana)
A
Armor (varman)
O
Ornaments (ābharaṇa)
G
Garments (ambara)
W
Weapons (āyudha)
C
Cattle herd (gāvaḥ)
B
Bull-leader (ṛṣabha)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights the fragility of collective morale in war: when a central champion falls, fear spreads rapidly and even seasoned warriors lose steadiness. Ethically, it points to the dependence of armies on leadership and inner resolve, and how attachment to power and reputation can collapse into panic when circumstances turn.

Sañjaya reports that Arjuna (Dhanañjaya) has struck Karṇa, leaving his armor, ornaments, clothing, and weapons scattered. Witnessing this, the Kuru warriors flee in disorder, compared to cattle stampeding after their leading bull has been killed in a desolate forest.