आससाद रणे पार्थ केशवं च महारथम् । फिर दूसरे बाणोंसे उसके धनुषको भी काटकर पार्थने विशेष बल-विक्रमका परिचय दिया। तब अम्बष्ठकी आँखें क्रोधसे व्याप्त हो गयीं। उसने गदा लेकर रणक्षेत्रमें महारथी श्रीकृष्ण और अर्जुनपर आक्रमण किया || ६२ $ || ततः सम्प्रहरन् वीरो गदामुद्यम्य भारत
tataḥ sampraharan vīro gadām udyamya bhārata
Sañjaya said: Then that hero, raising his mace, closed in to strike in the battle, O Bhārata. The scene underscores how, when a warrior’s weapons are repeatedly shattered, anger can harden into reckless aggression—yet the narrative also highlights the steadiness of Kṛṣṇa and Arjuna amid escalating violence.
संजय उवाच
The verse points to a recurring ethical tension in the Mahābhārata: when pride and anger take over, combat shifts from disciplined duty to impulsive violence. It implicitly values steadiness and restraint even amid legitimate warfare.
Sañjaya reports that a warrior (contextually, the attacker) lifts his mace and rushes into close combat, intensifying the fight. It marks a transition from missile exchanges to direct, forceful engagement.