त्रिशिरा-प्रबोधनम् तथा नरान्तक-वधः
Trisira’s Counsel and the Slaying of Naranthaka
अन्योन्यंपातयामासुःपरस्परजयैषिणः ।।।।रिपुशोणितदिग्धाङ्गास्तत्रवानरराक्षसाः
anyonyaṃ pātayāmāsuḥ paraspara-jayaiṣiṇaḥ |
ripu-śoṇita-digdhāṅgās tatra vānara-rākṣasāḥ ||
Allí, los Vánaras y los Rákṣasas, con los miembros manchados de la sangre enemiga y ansiosos cada cual de vencer al otro, se derribaban mutuamente una y otra vez.
Their limbs stained with the blood of foes, both Vanaras and Rakshasas eager to conquer one another started striking one another.
The verse highlights how the desire to conquer can consume all sides; Dharma, by contrast, demands that victory be sought only for justice, not for hatred or mere domination.
Both armies, bloodied and relentless, repeatedly knock each other down in a chaotic melee.
Titikṣā (endurance) amid suffering—though the verse also warns of the moral danger of unchecked victory-lust.