द्रुपदो द्रौपदेयाश्च सर्वशः पृथिवीपते। सौभद्रश्च महाबाहुः शङ्खान् दध्मुः पृथक् पृथक्॥

drupado draupadeyāś ca sarvaśaḥ pṛthivīpate / saubhadraś ca mahābāhuḥ śaṅkhān dadhmuḥ pṛthak pṛthak

The next generation sounds its own conch — Arjuna's son among them.

Word by word (7)
drupadaḥ
— Drupada, king and father of Draupadi
draupadeyāḥ
— the sons of Draupadi — one from each Pandava brother
sarvaśaḥ
— on all sides / all together
pṛthivī-pate
— O lord of the earth (address to Dhritarashtra)
saubhadraḥ
— Abhimanyu, son of Subhadra (and Arjuna) · Arjuna's own son. Will die in the battle at age 16, trapped in the chakravyuha formation.
mahā-bāhuḥ
— the mighty-armed
śaṅkhān dadhmuḥ pṛthak pṛthak
— blew their conches separately / each one his own

Drupada, the sons of Draupadi — each one separately — and the mighty Abhimanyu, Arjuna's own son, all blew their individual conches.

A modern analogy

The 'pṛthak pṛthak' — each separately — is a small but significant detail. Even within a coalition, each person sounds their own note. The harmony is made of individual voices, not the erasure of them.

Take with you

  • 'Pṛthak pṛthak' — each separately — teaches that collective action is still made of individual commitments.
  • Abhimanyu is here: Arjuna's 16-year-old son. The next generation is already in the field. What we do now shapes those who come after.
  • The Gita's opening symphony of conches ends with this verse — a full chorus of voices, each distinct, all committed.

The conch section (V12–18) concludes with this verse. What began with one conch (Bhishma's) has grown into a full symphony — drums, horns, and now individual conches sounding separately. The narrative arc from V12–18 mirrors the process by which individual actions become collective movements: one act triggers a cascade, which triggers a full orchestra. The mention of Abhimanyu ('saubhadraḥ' — son of Subhadra) is the Gita's acknowledgment that children are on the field. This is the context within which Arjuna's grief in V1.28–47 becomes fully comprehensible — he will hear his own son's conch and know what this battle will cost.

Modern parallels

In organizational change, the moment when multiple stakeholders independently signal their commitment — 'each separately' — is qualitatively different from a coordinated top-down announcement. 'Pṛthak pṛthak' describes voluntary, distributed commitment: the strongest kind.

Public-domain translations (2) compare all →

Drupada and the sons of Draupadi, O lord of the earth, and the mighty-armed son of Subhadra (Abhimanyu) — all blew their conches separately. [4]

And Drupada and the sons of Draupadi — on all sides, O lord of the earth — and the mighty-armed son of Subhadra sounded their conches. [9]

This verse speaks to

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