Bhīṣma’s Recollection of the Duel: Charioteer’s Fall, Brahmin Protection, and Portents after Rāma’s Collapse
इन्द्राशनिसमस्पर्शा यमदण्डसमप्र भाम् । ज्वलन्तीमग्निवत् संख्ये लेलिहानां समनन््तत:
indrāśani-samasparśā yamadaṇḍa-samaprabhām | jvalantīm agnivat saṅkhye lelihānāṃ samantataḥ ||
Her touch was as dreadful as Indra’s thunderbolt; her radiance was like Yama’s rod of punishment. Blazing in the midst of battle like fire, that power seemed to lick up blood on every side.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse underscores the moral gravity of war: when conflict escalates into instruments of death likened to Indra’s vajra and Yama’s daṇḍa, violence becomes impersonal and inexorable, reminding listeners that adharma-driven hostility invites destruction that spares none.
Bhīṣma is describing a terrifying, battle-blazing power (śakti/weapon) whose touch is compared to the thunderbolt and whose glow resembles Yama’s punitive staff; it rages like fire in combat, metaphorically ‘licking’ blood in all directions—an image of slaughter and unstoppable force.