तस्य कर्णो महाराज शरं कनकभूषणम् | प्रेषयामास संक्रुद्धों मृत्युदण्डमिवापरम्,महाराज! तब कर्णने अत्यन्त कुपित हो धृष्टद्युम्नपर द्वितीय मृत्युदण्डके समान एक सुवर्ण- भूषित बाण चलाया
tasya karṇo mahārāja śaraṃ kanakabhūṣaṇam | preṣayāmāsa saṃkruddho mṛtyudaṇḍam ivāparam ||
Sañjaya said: O King, then Karṇa, inflamed with anger, launched at him a golden-ornamented arrow—like a second rod of Death itself, Yama. Thus does wrath turn martial skill into an instrument of punishment, deepening the violence and its consequence upon the field.
संजय उवाच
The verse warns, through stark metaphor, how anger (saṃkruddha) can transform prowess into near-inevitable destruction—‘like Death’s rod’—highlighting the ethical peril of wrath in righteous conduct and warfare.
Sañjaya reports to Dhṛtarāṣṭra that Karṇa, furious, shoots a gold-adorned arrow at his opponent, described as a second ‘rod of Death,’ emphasizing the lethal intensity of the moment in battle.