निगृहमाणश्न तदा5<दिदेवो भृशं सरोष: किल चात्मयोगी । आदाय वेगेन जगाम विष्णु- जिंष्णुं महावात इवैकवृक्षम्,आदिदेव आत्मयोगी भगवान् श्रीकृष्ण बहुत रोषमें भरे हुए थे। वे अर्जुनके पकड़नेपर भी रुक न सके। जैसे आँधी किसी वृक्षको खींचे लिये चली जाय, उसी प्रकार वे भगवान् विष्णु अर्जुनको लिये हुए ही बड़े वेगसे आगे बढ़ने लगे
nigṛhyamāṇaś ca tadā ādidevo bhṛśaṃ saroṣaḥ kila cātmayogī | ādāya vegena jagāma viṣṇur jiṣṇuṃ mahāvāta ivaikavṛkṣam ||
Sañjaya said: Even as he was being restrained then, the Primeval Lord—an adept of inner yoga—was indeed fiercely enraged. Seizing Jiṣṇu (Arjuna), Viṣṇu surged forward with great speed, just as a mighty wind carries off a single tree.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical tension between restraint and necessary force: even a self-mastered divine agent (ātmayogī) may manifest fierce wrath when dharma is threatened, and once a righteous resolve is set in motion it can become unstoppable—like a gale—signaling the gravity of moral stakes in war.
Sañjaya describes Kṛṣṇa (as Viṣṇu/Ādideva) surging forward in great speed while Arjuna (Jiṣṇu) tries to restrain him; Kṛṣṇa cannot be held back and carries Arjuna along, compared to a powerful wind dragging a tree.