Bhagadatta’s Advance, the Saṃśaptaka Challenge, and Arjuna’s Counterstrike (द्रोणपर्व, अध्याय २६)
शिने: पौत्रस्य तु रथं परिगृहा महाद्विप:
śineḥ pautrasya tu rathaṃ parigṛhya mahādvipaḥ
Sañjaya said: The mighty elephant, having seized the chariot of Śini’s grandson, closed in upon it—an image of overwhelming force bearing down on a single warrior amid the chaos of battle, where valor is tested against brute power.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights a battlefield ethic: courage and steadiness are tested when a warrior faces disproportionate, crushing power. It underscores the Mahābhārata’s recurring theme that dharma in war includes endurance and composure amid sudden, life-threatening reversals.
Sañjaya describes a war-elephant (mahādvipa) moving in and physically seizing or hemming in the chariot belonging to Śini’s grandson, signaling an imminent danger and a dramatic escalation in that combat encounter.