Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 14

सनागप्त्त्यश्वरथा दिशो दश तथा यथा सिंहहता वनौकस: । जैसे सिंहके द्वारा घायल किये हुए जंगली पशु सब ओर भागने लगते हैं, उसी प्रकार उन नरश्रेष्ठ वीरोंके द्वारा बाणोंसे पीड़ित किये हुए कौरव तथा पाण्डव-सैनिक हाथी, घोड़े, रथ और पैदलोंसहित दसों दिशाओंमें भाग खड़े हुए ।। १३ $ ।। ततस्तु दुर्योधनभोजसौबला: कृपेण शारद्वतसूनुना सह

sanāgapattyaśvarathā diśo daśa tathā yathā siṁhahatā vanaukasaḥ | yathā siṁhena viddhā vanacarāḥ sarvato dhāvanti tathā te nararṣabhaiḥ śarair viddhāḥ kauravapāṇḍavāḥ sainyāḥ hastyaśvarathapattibhiḥ saha daśa diśo vidudruvuḥ ||

Sañjaya nói: Như thú rừng bị sư tử đánh trọng thương liền tán loạn chạy trốn khắp mọi phía, quân Kaurava và Pāṇḍava—bị mũi tên của những anh hùng bậc nhất ấy làm cho thương tích—cũng vỡ đội hình, lao chạy về mười phương, kéo theo voi, ngựa, chiến xa và bộ binh.

[{'term''diśaḥ (daśa diśaḥ)', 'definition': 'the directions (the ten quarters)'}, {'term': 'yathā … tathā', 'definition': 'just as … so also (comparative construction)'}, {'term': 'siṁha', 'definition': 'lion'}, {'term': 'hata / viddha', 'definition': 'struck, wounded, slain / pierced (by weapons)'}, {'term': 'vanaukasaḥ / vanacarāḥ', 'definition': 'forest-dwellers
[{'term':
wild animals'}, {'term''nararṣabha / narśreṣṭha', 'definition': 'bull among men
wild animals'}, {'term':
foremost hero'}, {'term''śara', 'definition': 'arrow'}, {'term': 'sainyāḥ', 'definition': 'troops, army units'}, {'term': 'kaurava-pāṇḍavāḥ', 'definition': 'the Kauravas and the Pāṇḍavas (their forces)'}, {'term': 'hasti-aśva-ratha-patti', 'definition': 'elephants, horses, chariots, and infantry'}, {'term': 'vidudruvuḥ / dhāvanti', 'definition': 'they fled / they run'}]
foremost hero'}, {'term':

संजय उवाच

S
Sañjaya
K
Kauravas (troops)
P
Pāṇḍavas (troops)
L
lion (simile)
W
wild animals/forest creatures (simile)
E
elephants
H
horses
C
chariots
I
infantry
T
ten directions (daśa diśaḥ)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights how quickly collective strength collapses when fear overrides discipline: in adharma-driven conflict, even mighty forces become unstable, and the immediate ethical lesson is the fragility of power that lacks inner steadiness (dhairya) and right purpose (dharma).

Sañjaya describes a sudden rout on the battlefield: struck by the arrows of leading warriors, both Kaurava and Pāṇḍava soldiers—together with elephants, horses, chariots, and infantry—scatter and flee in all directions, compared to wild animals fleeing a lion.