बक-गौतमाख्यानम् / The Baka–Gautama Account
On Gratitude and Friendship Ethics
बभूव भू: प्रतिभया मांसशोणितकर्दमा । वह अत्यन्त दारुण महान् युद्ध आरम्भ होनेपर पृथ्वीपर रक्त और मांसकी कीच जम गयी। जिससे वह अत्यन्त भयंकर प्रतीत होने लगी ।।
babhūva bhūḥ pratibhayā māṁsaśoṇitakardamā | dānavānāṁ śarīraiś ca patitaiḥ śoṇitokṣitaiḥ ||
Wika ni Bhīṣma: “Nang magsimula ang dakilang digmaan, ang lupa’y naging putik ng laman at dugo. Nakakalat ang mga bangkay ng mga Dānava, basang-basa sa dugo, kaya’t ang mismong daigdig ay nagmistulang lubhang kakila-kilabot.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights the horrific, dehumanizing reality of war: it transforms the earth into a blood-soaked mire. In the Shanti Parva’s ethical atmosphere, such imagery functions as a moral warning—victory and duty claims cannot erase the immense suffering and degradation produced by violence.
Bhishma describes the onset of a great battle: the ground becomes muddy with flesh and blood, and is covered with fallen, blood-drenched bodies of the Danavas, making the scene appear extremely terrifying.