हते कर्णे मया संख्ये सपुत्रे ससुहृज्जने । “आज युद्धस्थलमें पुत्रों और सुहृदोंसहित कर्णके मेरे द्वारा मारे जानेपर राजा दुर्योधन अपने लिये निरन्तर शोक करे ।। अद्य कर्ण हतं दृष्टवा धार्तराष्ट्रोत्यमर्षण:
hate karṇe mayā saṅkhye saputre sasuhṛjjane | adya karṇa-hataṃ dṛṣṭvā dhārtarāṣṭro 'tyamarṣaṇaḥ ||
Sañjaya nói: “Khi Karṇa bị ta giết trong trận—cùng với các con, bạn hữu và tùy tùng của chàng—thì hôm nay, vừa thấy Karṇa ngã xuống, con trai của Dhṛtarāṣṭra (Duryodhana), không sao chịu nổi cú đánh ấy, sẽ bị nỗi sầu vô tận thiêu đốt vì chính mình.”
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores the moral and psychological consequence of war: the fall of a chief ally (Karṇa) becomes a decisive blow that turns martial pride into unbearable sorrow. It highlights how attachment to power and dependence on a single champion can collapse into self-consuming grief when fortune reverses.
Sañjaya reports that Karṇa has been killed in battle along with his sons and associates. He anticipates that Duryodhana, described as unable to endure such a loss, will be overwhelmed by continual grief upon seeing Karṇa fallen.