Dhṛtarāṣṭra’s Anxiety and Bhīṣma’s Theological Explanation of Pāṇḍava Invincibility
Book 6, Chapter 61
वकश्िदुत्पत्य समरे वरवारणमास्थित: । केशपक्षे परामृश्य जहार समरे शिर:,कोई योद्धा रणक्षेत्रमें उछलकर बड़े-बड़े हाथियोंपर चढ़ जाता और विपक्षी योद्धाके केशोंको पकड़कर उसका सिर काट लेता था
vakaścid utpatya samare varavāraṇam āsthitaḥ | keśapakṣe parāmṛśya jahāra samare śiraḥ ||
સમરમાં કોઈ યોદ્ધા ઉછળી ને મહાવારણ પર ચઢી જતો; શત્રુના કેશપક્ષને પકડીને એ જ યુદ્ધના ઘમાસાણમાં તેનું શિર કાપી લઈ જતો.
संजय उवाच
The verse is primarily descriptive rather than doctrinal: it highlights the ferocity and daring celebrated in battlefield culture, while implicitly raising an ethical contrast between heroic ideals and the horrifying reality of violence.
Sañjaya narrates extreme feats occurring in the Kurukṣetra war: a warrior leaps up, mounts a great elephant, grabs an enemy by the hair, and beheads him amid the fighting.