शल्यस्य पाण्डवसेनापीडनम् — Śalya’s Assault on the Pāṇḍava Host
with Omens and Bhīma’s Counter
सुषेणस्तु ततः क्रुद्ध: पाण्डवं विशिखैस्त्रिभि: | सुतसोम॑ तु विंशत्या बाह्दोरुरगसि चार्पयत्
suṣeṇas tu tataḥ kruddhaḥ pāṇḍavaṁ viśikhaiḥ tribhiḥ | sutasomaṁ tu viṁśatyā bāhvor uragasi cārpayat ||
Sañjaya sprach: Da durchbohrte Suṣeṇa, vom Zorn entflammt, den Pāṇḍava Nakula mit drei scharfen Pfeilen; und Sutasoma traf er mit zwanzig Pfeilen, die sich in beide Arme und in die Brust bohrten.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how krodha (anger) fuels disproportionate harm in war: martial skill becomes an instrument of escalation when inner restraint is lost, reminding readers that ethical self-control is a crucial counterweight even within kṣatriya duty.
Sañjaya reports that the warrior Suṣeṇa, angered in combat, shoots Nakula with three arrows and then strikes Sutasoma with twenty arrows, embedding them in his arms and chest—an episode of intense exchange of missiles in the Shalya Parva battle.