विगाह्[ तां पाण्डवबाणवदवृुष्टिं शरै: परं नाम ततः प्रकाश्य । शतेन कृष्णं सहसाभ्यविद्ध्यत् त्रिभि: शतैरजुन क्षुद्रकाणाम्
vigāhya tāṃ pāṇḍava-bāṇa-vadavṛṣṭiṃ śaraiḥ paraṃ nāma tataḥ prakāśya | śatena kṛṣṇaṃ sahasābhyavidhyat tribhiḥ śatair arjunaṃ kṣudrakāṇām ||
قال سَنْجَيا: ثمّ اندفع غائصًا في عاصفةِ سهامِ الباندڤا، وأظهر اسمَه الأعلى؛ وبعدها باغتَ الهجومَ، فأصاب كريشنا بمئةِ سهم، وأصاب أرجونا بثلاثمئةِ سهمٍ صغيرٍ نافذٍ حادّ.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the kṣatriya ideal of fearlessly entering danger and asserting one’s martial identity, while also reminding the reader that even valorous skill unfolds within a larger moral tragedy where dharma is contested and suffering is amplified by pride and rivalry.
In Sañjaya’s report from the battlefield, a warrior charges into the Pāṇḍavas’ dense arrow-barrage, proclaims his famed name/epithet as a battle-cry, and rapidly wounds Kṛṣṇa with a hundred arrows and Arjuna with three hundred smaller shafts.