Śalya–Bhīma Gadā-saṃnipāta and Śalya’s Bāṇa-jāla against Yudhiṣṭhira
Book 9, Chapter 11
मृगाश्न महिषाश्चापि पक्षिणश्न विशाम्पते । अपसव्य॑ं तदा चक्रुः सेनां ते बहुशो नूप,प्रजानाथ! नरेश्वर! उस समय मृग, महिष और पक्षी आपकी सेनाको बारंबार दाहिने करके जाने लगे
Sañjaya uvāca: mṛgāś ca mahiṣāś cāpi pakṣiṇaś ca viśāmpate | apasavyaṃ tadā cakruḥ senāṃ te bahuśo nṛpa prajānātha nareśvara ||
三阇耶说道:“噢,民之主,噢,大王!那时鹿、野牛与群鸟屡屡绕行你的军阵,使军队始终在它们的右侧(即以不祥之向回旋)。”
संजय उवाच
The verse uses the language of omens to underline ethical causality in epic narrative: when a ruler’s cause is burdened by adharma, nature itself appears to signal danger. It implicitly urges kings to examine their conduct and the justice of their war, not merely their strategy.
Sañjaya reports to the king that animals—deer, buffaloes, and birds—kept moving around the king’s army in an apasavya manner, a traditional sign of inauspiciousness. This functions as a portent foreshadowing misfortune for that side in the unfolding battle.