Karṇa-parva Adhyāya 58 — Arjuna’s Arrow-Storm and Relief of Bhīmasena
नैवान्तरिक्षं न दिशो नापि योधा: समन्तत:
naivāntarikṣaṃ na diśo nāpi yodhāḥ samantataḥ
Sañjaya dijo: Ni el cielo de lo alto, ni las direcciones en torno, ni siquiera los guerreros por todos los flancos podían distinguirse con claridad—todo parecía tragado por el estruendo y la confusión de la batalla.
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores how war overwhelms clarity: when violence peaks, even basic orientation—sky, directions, and the presence of others—becomes indistinct. Ethically, it hints at the dehumanizing fog of conflict, where discernment (viveka) is easily lost.
Sanjaya, narrating the Kurukṣetra battle to Dhṛtarāṣṭra, depicts a moment of extreme tumult in which the battlefield is so filled with dust, noise, and motion that neither the sky nor the directions nor the surrounding warriors can be properly perceived.