Daṇḍotpatti-kathana (Origin and Function of Daṇḍa) — वसुहोम–मान्धातृ संवाद
नीलोत्पलदलश्यामश्नतुर्वष्ट श्वतुर्भुज: । अष्टपान्नैकनयन: शंकुकर्णोर्ध्वरीमवान्
nīlotpaladalaśyāmaś caturdaṃṣṭraś caturbhujaḥ | aṣṭapān naikanayanaḥ śaṅkukarṇordhvaromavān ||
Bhishma said: “His body’s radiance is dark like the petal of a blue lotus. He has four tusks and four arms; eight feet and many eyes. His ears are like pegs, and the hairs on his body stand upward.” The description evokes an awe-inspiring, fearsome form, teaching the listener of the overwhelming power and dread that may attend formidable forces in the epic’s moral universe.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse uses vivid physical imagery to communicate moral and psychological impact: certain beings or forces are portrayed as terrifying and extraordinary to signal their power and the seriousness of the ethical situation being discussed in Bhishma’s instruction.
In Bhishma’s discourse in the Shanti Parva, he describes a formidable figure with striking, non-human features—dark like a blue lotus petal, with multiple limbs and eyes—emphasizing awe and dread as part of the didactic narrative.