Daśame’hani Bhīṣma-yuddham — Śikhaṇḍī-rakṣaṇa, Arjuna-prabhāva, Duryodhana-āśraya-vākyam
जैसे प्रलयकालमें साक्षात् काल सबको मार डालता है, उसी प्रकार अर्जुनकी मार खाकर त्रिगर्तदेशीय सैनिक मरनेका निश्चय करके पुनः उन्हींपर टूट पड़े ।।
sañjaya uvāca | yathā pralayakāle sākṣāt kālaḥ sarvān mārayati tathā arjunena nihanyamānās trigartadeśīyā yodhā mṛtyuṃ niścitya punar evārjunasyaiva samīpaṃ pratyapatanta | mumucuḥ śaravṛṣṭiṃ ca pāṇḍavasya rathaṃ prati | śaravṛṣṭiṃ tatas tāṃ tu śaravarṣaḥ samantataḥ ||
Sañjaya dit : Comme au temps de la dissolution, lorsque le Temps lui-même frappe tous les êtres, ainsi les guerriers de Trigarta—bien qu’abattus par Arjuna—résolurent de mourir et se ruèrent de nouveau sur lui. Ils déchaînèrent une pluie de flèches contre le char du Pândava ; mais, de toutes parts, cette averse fut accueillie par la contre-tempête de traits d’Arjuna.
संजय उवाच
The verse frames battlefield violence through the image of Kāla (Time/Death): individual prowess and collective courage still move within an overpowering moral-cosmic order. It highlights the Kshatriya ideal of steadfast resolve—even to death—while also reminding that destruction, once unleashed, can become impersonal and inevitable like Time.
After suffering heavy losses at Arjuna’s hands, the Trigarta fighters decide on a desperate, death-bound charge. They pour a dense arrow-shower at Arjuna’s chariot, and Arjuna answers with an even more encompassing counter-rain of arrows from all directions.