Rajo-dhūli-saṃmūḍha-saṅgrāmaḥ
The Dust-Obscured Battle and Mutual Charges
स हि शूरश्न कौन्तेय: क्षिप्रकारी धनंजय: । मन्ये शरै: शरीराणि शत्रूणां प्रमथिष्यति
sa hi śūraś ca kaunteyaḥ kṣiprakārī dhanañjayaḥ | manye śaraiḥ śarīrāṇi śatrūṇāṃ pramathiṣyati, tāta ||
کنتی کا بیٹا دھننجے ارجن واقعی سورما ہے—عمل میں تیز اور فیصلہ کن۔ بیٹے! اس کے بارے میں میرا خوف مسلسل قائم رہتا ہے اور کم نہیں ہوتا۔ میرا خیال ہے کہ وہ اپنے تیروں سے دشمنوں کے جسموں کو مَتھ کر کچل ڈالے گا۔
धृतराष्ट उवाच
The verse highlights how fear and attachment cloud judgment: Dhṛtarāṣṭra’s anxiety for his son makes him fixate on Arjuna’s prowess. Ethically, it underscores the Mahābhārata theme that inner states (fear, partiality) shape political and moral choices, often leading to ruin.
During the war reports and anticipations in Bhīṣma Parva, Dhṛtarāṣṭra speaks to his son (implicitly Duryodhana), confessing persistent fear of Arjuna. He describes Arjuna as swift and heroic and predicts that Arjuna will devastate the enemy ranks with his arrows.