भीमसेनस्य कौरवसुतवधः तथा श्रुतर्वावधः
Slaying of Kaurava princes and the fall of Śrutarvā
युधिष्ठिरो5पि संक्रुद्धो माद्रीपुत्रौ च पाण्डवौ । गार्ध्रपत्रै:शितैर्बाणैरनिन्युवैं यमसादनम्
yudhiṣṭhiro 'pi saṅkruddho mādrīputrau ca pāṇḍavau | gārdhrapatraiḥ śitair bāṇair aninyuvai yamasādanam ||
Sañjaya nói: Yudhiṣṭhira cũng bừng bừng phẫn nộ; và hai người con của Mādrī—Nakula và Sahadeva, con của Pāṇḍu—dùng những mũi tên sắc, gắn lông kền kền, bắt đầu tiễn kẻ thù về cõi của Yama.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the tension between dharma and the harsh demands of war: even those committed to righteousness can be driven by anger and compelled to enact deadly force as part of kṣatriya-duty, reminding readers to reflect on how emotion and obligation interact in ethical action.
Sañjaya reports that Yudhiṣṭhira, along with Nakula and Sahadeva, becomes fiercely angry and attacks with sharp, vulture-feather-fletched arrows, killing enemies—described poetically as sending them to Yama’s abode.