अष्टपज्चाश तं॑ रात्र्य: शयानस्याद्य मे गता: । शरेषु निशिताग्रेषु यथा वर्षशतं तथा
aṣṭapañcāśataṁ rātryaḥ śayānasya adya me gatāḥ | śareṣu niśitāgreṣu yathā varṣaśataṁ tathā ||
قال فايشَمبايانا: «اليوم مضت عليَّ ثمانٍ وخمسون ليلة وأنا مضطجع على سريرٍ من السهام ذات رؤوسٍ حادّة كالموسى؛ غير أنّ هذه الأيام مرّت عليّ كأنها مئة عام».
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights how physical pain and the consequences of war can stretch subjective time, underscoring the ethical weight of violence and the need for steadfast endurance (dhairya) when one must bear the results of past actions.
A speaker reports that he has been lying on a bed of sharp arrows for fifty-eight nights, and that this period feels unbearably long—like a hundred years—conveying the intensity of his suffering in the aftermath of battle.