समुद्रतट-प्रयाणम् तथा वेलावन-निवेशः
March to the Seacoast and Encampment at the Shore
अधिकं शैलराजस्तु धातुभिस्सुविभूषितः ।धातुभ्यःप्रसृतो रेणुर्वायुवेग विघट्टितः ।सुमहद्वानरानीकं छादयामास सर्वतः ।।।।
adhikaṃ śailarājas tu dhātubhiḥ suvibhūṣitaḥ | dhātubhyaḥ prasṛto reṇur vāyuvega-vighaṭṭitaḥ | sumahad vānarānīkaṃ chādayāmāsa sarvataḥ ||
Ce roi des montagnes brillait d’un éclat surabondant, richement paré de minerais. La poussière de ces minerais, soulevée et projetée par la violence du vent sous le piétinement, monta et couvrit de toutes parts la vaste armée des Vānara.
That lord of mountains richly adorned with minerals shone very brightly. The mineral particles raised by the stamping of the vanara troops covered the huge vanaras all over.
It heightens the scale and intensity of the righteous campaign to restore order: the disciplined, collective effort of the vānaras (serving Rāma’s dharmic cause) is portrayed as powerful enough to shake the very mountain and fill the air with mineral dust.
Satya appears through the narrator’s faithful, matter-of-fact depiction of events—presenting the scene as it is, without exaggeration of motive—supporting the epic’s larger commitment to truthful narration while framing the war as a consequence of moral realities.