ते वध्यमाना भीमेन मातड़ा गिरिसंनिभा: । निपेतुरुरव्या सहिता नादयन्तो वसुन्धराम्
te vadhyamānā bhīmena mātaṅgā girisannibhāḥ | nipetur urvyā sahitā nādayanto vasundharām ||
قال سنجيا: لما صرعهم بهيما، سقطت الفيلة الجبّارة—عظيمة كأنها جبال—دفعةً واحدة على الأرض؛ ودوّى صهيلها وهدير ارتطامها في باطن التراب، حتى ارتجّت به الواسعة.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the overwhelming destructiveness of war: even beings as powerful as mountain-like elephants collapse, and the earth itself seems to echo the suffering. It implicitly invites reflection on the moral weight and human cost that accompany righteous warfare (dharma-yuddha) when it becomes materially catastrophic.
Sanjaya describes Bhīma cutting down masses of war-elephants. As they are slain, they fall together to the ground, and their cries and the impact of their bodies make the earth reverberate—intensifying the sensory portrayal of the battle.