Gadā-yuddhe Bhīma–Duryodhanayoḥ Tumulaḥ Saṃprahāraḥ
Mace-duel’s intense exchange
अज्ञाप्य सर्वान् नृपतीन् भुक्त्वा चेमां वसुंधराम् । गदामादाय वेगेन पदाति: प्रस्थितो रणे
ajñāpya sarvān nṛpatīn bhuktvā cemāṁ vasuṁdharām | gadām ādāya vegena padātiḥ prasthito raṇe |
Wika ni Vaiśampāyana: “Matapos mag-utos sa lahat ng mga hari at tamasahin ang mismong daigdig na ito, kinuha niya ang pamalo at, sa pagmamadali, lumakad patungo sa digmaan.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Worldly power and enjoyment are unstable: even one who commands kings and ‘enjoys the earth’ can be brought low by the consequences of conflict and the turning of fortune, revealing the fragility of sovereignty and pride.
The narrator describes a ruler who formerly exercised authority over other kings and possessed the earth, but now—taking up a mace—hurries into battle on foot, highlighting a dramatic fall from imperial command to exposed combatant.