तैर्मुक्तकेशैस्समरे पतितैश्शोणितोक्षितैः।आस्तीर्णा वसुधा कृत्स्ना महावेदिः कुशैरिव।।।।
tair muktakeśaiḥ samare patitaiḥ śoṇitokṣitaiḥ | āstīrṇā vasudhā kṛtsnā mahāvediḥ kuśair iva ||
रण में गिरे हुए—बिखरे केशों वाले और रक्त से सिंचित—उनसे समूची वसुधा ऐसी आच्छादित हो गई, मानो कुश से बिछी हुई महान वेदी हो।
Fourteen thousand formidable demons were killed by Rama, a pedestrian human, single-handed.
The verse warns of the grave cost of conflict: even when fought for protection, war leaves a ritual-like field of death, urging restraint and responsibility in the use of force.
The battlefield is covered with fallen demons; the poet uses a sacrificial-altar simile to intensify the scene.
Not a single virtue directly, but the text underscores the solemnity of righteous combat and its weighty aftermath.