Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 173

Adhyāya 108 — Nimitta-darśana and Drona’s counsel amid Arjuna’s advance (निमित्तदर्शनं द्रोणोपदेशश्च)

पौर्णमास्यामम्बुवेगं यथा वेला महोददथे: । महाराज! तब राजा युधिष्छिर तथा पाण्बुपुत्र माद्रीनन्दन नकुल-सहदेवने समरभूमिमें उन घुड़सवारोंका वेग नष्ट कर दिया। ठीक उसी तरह

sañjaya uvāca | paurṇamāsyām ambu-vegaṃ yathā velā mahodadheḥ | mahārāja! tadā rājā yudhiṣṭhiraḥ tathā pāṇḍu-putraḥ mādrī-nandanaḥ nakula-sahadevau samara-bhūmau teṣāṃ aśvārūḍhānāṃ vegam nāśayām āsa | tathāiva yathā varṣā-ṛtau bahu-jalena paripūrṇaḥ maryādāṃ laṅghitum icchan mahodadhiḥ paurṇamāsyāṃ vardhita-vegaḥ san taṭa-bhūmyā niruddhaḥ bhavati |

三阇耶说道:“大王啊,正如雨季的满月之日,大海因水量充盈而汹涌膨胀、几欲越界,却被海岸之地所遏止;同样,战场之上,坚提国王由提施提罗与般度、摩德丽之子那俱罗、娑诃提婆一道,击碎并消解了那些骑兵的冲势。”

{'sañjaya uvāca''Sanjaya said', 'paurṇamāsyām': 'on the full-moon day', 'ambu-vegaḥ': 'rush/surge of water', 'velā': 'shoreline
{'sañjaya uvāca':
coast', 'mahodadhiḥ / mahodadheḥ''the great ocean', 'mahārāja': 'O great king (address to Dhritarashtra)', 'tadā': 'then, at that time', 'rājā': 'king', 'yudhiṣṭhiraḥ': 'Yudhishthira', 'pāṇḍu-putraḥ': 'son of Pandu (Pandava)', 'mādrī-nandanaḥ': 'son of Madri (Nakula/Sahadeva)', 'nakula-sahadevau': 'Nakula and Sahadeva', 'samara-bhūmi': 'battlefield', 'aśvārūḍha': 'mounted on horses
coast', 'mahodadhiḥ / mahodadheḥ':
cavalryman', 'vegaḥ''speed
cavalryman', 'vegaḥ':
momentum', 'nāśayati''to destroy
momentum', 'nāśayati':
to break', 'varṣā-ṛtu''rainy season', 'paripūrṇa': 'filled
to break', 'varṣā-ṛtu':
replete', 'maryādā''limit
replete', 'maryādā':
proper restraint', 'laṅghitum''to overstep
proper restraint', 'laṅghitum':
to transgress', 'taṭa-bhūmi''bank/shore land
to transgress', 'taṭa-bhūmi':

संजय उवाच

S
Sanjaya
D
Dhritarashtra (addressed as Mahārāja)
Y
Yudhishthira
N
Nakula
S
Sahadeva
P
Pandu
M
Madri
B
battlefield (samara-bhūmi)
C
cavalry/horsemen (aśvārūḍhāḥ)
O
ocean (mahodadhi)
S
shoreline/coast (velā/taṭa)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights the ethical ideal of maryādā (right limits): even immense force becomes meaningful only when governed by restraint and order. The Pandavas’ disciplined resistance is likened to the shore that prevents the ocean’s swelling power from becoming destructive.

Sanjaya reports to Dhritarashtra that Yudhishthira, together with Nakula and Sahadeva, blunted and stopped the charge of enemy horsemen on the battlefield, just as the coast halts the ocean’s surging waves on a full-moon day in the rainy season.