Book 10, Adhyāya 12: Aśvatthāmā’s Request for the Cakra and the Brahmaśiras Context
अस्मत्तस्तदुपादाय दिव्यमस्त्रं यदूत्तम | ममात्यस्त्रं प्रयच्छ त्वं चक्रं रिपुहणं रणे
asmattas tad upādāya divyam astraṁ yad uttamam | mamātyastraṁ prayaccha tvaṁ cakraṁ ripuhaṇaṁ raṇe ||
Wika ni Vaiśampāyana: “O pinakamainam sa mga Yadu, tanggapin mo mula sa akin ang kataas-taasang banal na sandata; at kapalit, ipagkaloob mo sa akin ang iyong pinakadakilang sandata—ang Cakra, na pumapatay sa mga kaaway sa labanan.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical gravity of extraordinary power: divine weapons are not ordinary tools but sanctioned forces whose transfer and use imply responsibility, dependence, and the escalation of violence through ‘ultimate’ means.
A speaker (reported by Vaiśampāyana) proposes an exchange: he offers a supreme divine astra and asks in return for the enemy-destroying cakra, emphasizing the strategic and symbolic importance of possessing decisive weapons in battle.