Adhyāya 168: Arjuna’s counters to māyā-rains and the onset of darkness
Nivātakavaca engagement
ततः शरैर्दीप्तमुखैर्यन्त्रितैरनुमन्त्रितै: । प्रत्यविध्यमहं तं॑ तु वजैरिव शिलोच्चयम्
tataḥ śarair dīptamukhair yantritair anumantritaiḥ | pratyavidhyam ahaṃ taṃ tu vajrair iva śilocchayam ||
Arjuna dit : «Puis, de flèches aux pointes flamboyantes—bandées à pleine tension et consacrées par des mantras—je le frappai encore et encore, comme si un massif de roche était foudroyé par des éclairs».
अजुन उवाच
Power in battle is portrayed as disciplined and consecrated: Arjuna’s effectiveness comes from controlled technique (yantrita—fully drawn, regulated) and purposeful empowerment (anumantrita—mantra-charged), not from uncontrolled rage. The simile of thunderbolts striking rock emphasizes steadfast resolve and repeated, measured action.
Arjuna describes a combat moment: after a prior exchange, he releases blazing, well-drawn, mantra-empowered arrows and repeatedly wounds his opponent, comparing the impact to thunderbolts battering a rocky mountain.