Sauptika Parva, Adhyaya 8 — Dhṛṣṭadyumna-vadha and the Camp’s Nocturnal Rout
केशेष्वालभ्य पाणि भ्यां निष्पिपेष महीतले । अब वह शगय्यासे उठनेकी चेष्टा करने लगा। इतनेहीमें महाबली अभ्वत्थामाने दोनों हाथसे उसके बाल पकड़कर पृथ्वीपर पटक दिया और वहाँ अच्छी तरह रगड़ा
keśeṣv ālabhya pāṇibhyāṃ niṣpipeṣa mahītale |
Sañjaya sprach: Aśvatthāman packte ihn mit beiden Händen am Haar, schleuderte ihn zu Boden und zermalmte ihn dort.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how, in the collapse of moral restraint after catastrophic war, vengeance can drive acts that violate the spirit of dharma. It serves as a cautionary depiction of cruelty and excess when anger replaces ethical discernment.
Sañjaya describes Aśvatthāmā physically overpowering an opponent: he grabs the person by the hair with both hands, throws him to the ground, and crushes him there—an image of ruthless domination during the Sauptika night violence.