रणभूमिवर्णनम् — Devāsuropama-yuddha and the ‘River’ Metaphor of the Battlefield
वादित्राणां च निनद:ः प्रादुरासीद् विशाम्पते । आयोधनार्थ योधानां बलानां चाप्युदीर्यताम्
sañjaya uvāca | vāditrāṇāṃ ca ninādaḥ prādurāsīd viśāṃpate | āyodhanārthaṃ yodhānāṃ balānāṃ cāpy udīryatām, prajānātha |
Sinabi ni Sañjaya: “O panginoon ng mga tao, biglang umalingawngaw sa lahat ng dako ang malalim na dagundong ng sari-saring tugtugin. Kasabay nito’y narinig ang malaking kaingayan ng mga mandirigmang handa na sa labanan at ng mga hukbong sumusulong upang makipagsagupaan.”
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores the inevitability and momentum of war once collective forces are set in motion: the instruments, warriors, and armies together create an overwhelming surge. Ethically, it frames the king’s responsibility—he must recognize how decisions and attachments culminate in large-scale violence that becomes difficult to restrain.
Sañjaya reports to Dhṛtarāṣṭra that the battlefield has come alive with the booming sounds of war instruments and the loud commotion of fighters and advancing troops, indicating that the armies are fully mobilized and battle is imminent.