दण्डधारवधः | The Slaying of Daṇḍadhāra
प्रतिविन्ध्यस्ततश्रित्रं भित्ता पठचभिराशुगै: । सारथिं च त्रिभिरविंद्ध्वा ध्वजमेकेषुणापि च
prativindhyas tataḥ śitraṃ bhittvā pañcabhir āśugaiḥ | sārathiṃ ca tribhir avindhyā dhvajam ekeṣuṇāpi ca ||
Sañjaya said: Then Prativindhya, piercing the foe’s armor with five swift arrows, struck the charioteer with three more; and with a single shaft he also hit the banner—an emphatic display of precision amid the relentless discipline of war, where prowess is measured by controlled force rather than mere fury.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights disciplined martial excellence: even in war, a warrior’s power is shown through precision and control—piercing armor, targeting the charioteer, and striking the banner—rather than uncontrolled violence.
Sañjaya reports that Prativindhya shoots a sequence of arrows: five to pierce the opponent’s armor, three to wound the charioteer, and one to strike the chariot’s banner, signaling dominance in the ongoing battle.