ततस्तु द्रुपद: क्रोधाच्छरवर्षमवासृजत्
tatastu drupadaḥ krodhāc charavarṣam avāsṛjat
قال سَنجايا: ثمّ إنّ دروبادا، وقد اشتعل غضبًا، أطلق وابلًا من السهام—فيضًا من السخط يحوّل لهيبَ الباطن إلى عنفٍ ظاهرٍ على ساحة القتال.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how krodha (anger) quickly externalizes into harmful action; even within a warrior context, unchecked wrath intensifies violence and clouds discernment, a recurring ethical warning in the Mahābhārata.
Sañjaya reports that Drupada, provoked and enraged, responds in battle by releasing a dense volley—described as a ‘rain’—of arrows against his opponents.