अतिकायवधः
The Slaying of Atikāya
तंब्रह्मणोऽस्त्रेणनियुज्यचापेशरंसुपुङ्खंयमदूतकल्पम् ।सौमित्रिरिन्द्रारिसुतस्यतस्यससर्जबाणंयुधिवज्रकल्पम् ।।।।
taṃ brahmaṇo’streṇa niyujya cāpe śaraṃ supuṅkhaṃ yamadūta-kalpam |
saumitrir indrāri-sutasya tasya sasarja bāṇaṃ yudhi vajra-kalpam ||
Saumitri encajó en su arco una flecha de hermosas plumas, investida con el arma de Brahmā y semejante a un mensajero de Yama; y en medio del combate soltó contra él, el hijo del enemigo de Indra (Atikāya), aquel dardo como rayo.
Golden feathered arrow, which resembled thunderbolt, was released on Atikaya, enemy of Indra for whom it was like a messenger of death. It was charged with Brahma's mystic by Saumithri and released on fixing it.
Lakṣmaṇa’s act is framed as disciplined, purposeful combat: a righteous warrior uses divinely sanctioned power with focus to stop an adharma-aligned aggressor, protecting the just cause rather than indulging in cruelty.
Satya here is the fidelity to rightful intent and duty: the narrative presents Lakṣmaṇa’s action as aligned with the truthful commitment to Rāma’s cause—defeating forces that uphold falsehood and tyranny—rather than as arbitrary violence.