Sauptika Parva, Adhyaya 8 — Dhṛṣṭadyumna-vadha and the Camp’s Nocturnal Rout
निशाचराणां सत्त्वानां रात्रि: सा हर्षवर्धिनी । आसीजक्नरगजाश्चानां रौद्री क्षयकरी भूशम्
niśācarāṇāṃ sattvānāṃ rātriḥ sā harṣavardhinī | āsīj jananara-gajāśvānāṃ raudrī kṣayakarī bhṛśam ||
वह रात्रि निशाचर प्राणियों के हर्ष को बढ़ानेवाली थी, पर मनुष्यों, घोड़ों और हाथियों के लिए अत्यन्त रौद्र और विनाशकारिणी सिद्ध हुई।
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the moral inversion of war: the same night that becomes a source of strength and joy for predatory or nocturnal forces turns into catastrophic suffering for others. It underscores how adharma-driven violence thrives in darkness and how circumstances can empower destructive agents while devastating the vulnerable.
Sañjaya describes the ominous night during the Sauptika events: it favors the night-roaming beings (implying attackers moving under cover of darkness) and proves fiercely ruinous for the human camp and its animals—men, horses, and elephants—setting the tone for the nocturnal slaughter.