Adhyāya 141 — Night duels: Śaineya and Bhūriśravas; Droṇi and Ghaṭotkaca; Bhīma and Duryodhana
शरजालावृते व्योम्नि न प्राज्ञायत किंचन । उस समय न तो सूर्यका पता चलता था और न वायु ही चल पाती थी। बाणोंके समूहसे आच्छादित हुए आकाशगमें कुछ भी जान नहीं पड़ता था
śarajālāvṛte vyomni na prājñāyata kiñcana |
قال سنجيا: لما حُجِبَت السماءُ بشَبَكَةٍ من السهام لم يُعْرَفْ شيءٌ البتّة. في تلك اللحظة لم يُمَيَّزْ قرصُ الشمس، وحتى الريح بدت كأنها لا تستطيع أن تهبّ—هكذا كان طوفانُ المقذوفات الذي طمسَ صفحةَ السماء.
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores how unchecked violence can eclipse clarity and order: when warfare reaches an extreme, even the natural signs that guide perception (sun, wind, visibility) seem to vanish. Ethically, it functions as a warning about the dehumanizing, disorienting force of relentless conflict.
Sañjaya describes an intense phase of battle in which volleys of arrows fill the air so densely that the sky appears covered like a net, making it impossible to see clearly; the scene is portrayed as so overwhelming that the sun is not visible and the wind seems stilled.