शिक्षाबलेन निहतं पित्रा तव विशाम्पते । भरतश्रेष्ठ] उस दसवें दिनके आनेपर एकमात्र भीष्मने युद्धमें मत्स्य और पांचालदेशकी सेनाओंके अगणित हाथी
sañjaya uvāca | śikṣābalena nihataṃ pitrā tava viśāmpate |
Sanjaya said: O lord of the people, it was slain by your father through the sheer power of his martial training. When the tenth day came, Bhishma alone in battle killed countless elephants and horses of the Matsya and Panchala hosts, and he slew seven maharathas. O protector of the people, then, after killing five thousand chariot-warriors, Bhishma—who is like a father to you—by the strength of his weapons-training destroyed in that great war fourteen thousand foot-soldiers, one thousand elephants, and ten thousand horses.
संजय उवाच
The line highlights how disciplined training (śikṣā) becomes a decisive force (bala). Ethically, it points to the ambivalence of excellence: mastery and duty can produce awe-inspiring skill, yet in war that same skill magnifies destruction, raising questions about responsibility and the cost of kṣatriya action.
Sanjaya, reporting to the king, attributes a killing/defeat to ‘your father’ (Bhishma) and specifically to the power of his weapons-training. In the surrounding passage (as reflected in the Hindi gloss), this functions as part of a broader description of Bhishma’s devastating battlefield performance and the heavy casualties inflicted.