तस्मै कर्ण: शतं राजन्निषूणां गार्ध्रवाससाम् । अमर्षी बलवान क्रुद्ध: प्रेषयामास भारत,राजन्! भरतनन्दन! अमर्षशील एवं क्रोधमें भरे हुए बलवान् कर्णने भीमसेनपर गीधके पंखवाले सौ बाण चलाये
tasmai karṇaḥ śataṁ rājann iṣūṇāṁ gārdhravāsasām | amarṣī balavān kruddhaḥ preṣayāmāsa bhārata ||
Sañjaya said: Then, O King, Karṇa—powerful, intolerant of affront, and inflamed with anger—shot at him a hundred arrows, their shafts adorned with vulture-feathers. In the relentless ethic of battlefield rivalry, Karṇa answers perceived provocation not with restraint but with overwhelming force, intensifying the cycle of wrath that drives the combat onward.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how anger (krodha) and wounded pride (amarṣa) can override restraint, leading to disproportionate retaliation. In the Mahābhārata’s ethical landscape, such reactions may be valorized as kṣatriya ferocity yet also serve as a warning about the self-propelling nature of wrath in conflict.
Sañjaya narrates to the king that Karṇa, enraged and powerful, releases a volley of one hundred vulture-feathered arrows at his opponent (contextually Bhīmasena), marking an intense escalation in their battlefield exchange.