Vṛtrāsura Rebukes Indra; Heroic Combat and the Asura’s Pure Devotional Prayers
ममर्द पद्भ्यां सुरसैन्यमातुरं निमीलिताक्षं रणरङ्गदुर्मद: । गां कम्पयन्नुद्यतशूल ओजसा नालं वनं यूथपतिर्यथोन्मद: ॥ ८ ॥
mamarda padbhyāṁ sura-sainyam āturaṁ nimīlitākṣaṁ raṇa-raṅga-durmadaḥ gāṁ kampayann udyata-śūla ojasā nālaṁ vanaṁ yūtha-patir yathonmadaḥ
戦場で、恐怖に目を閉じた動揺する天軍を、戦狂いのヴリトラースラは足で踏みにじった。三叉戟を掲げ、その剛力で大地を震わせるさまは、森で狂った象の王が空洞の竹を踏み砕くがごとくであった。
It portrays Vṛtrāsura as overwhelmingly powerful in battle—trampling the demigod army, raising his trident, and shaking the earth like a maddened elephant leader shaking a forest.
The comparison highlights unstoppable force and battlefield frenzy: just as a powerful elephant leader can shake a forest, Vṛtrāsura’s might makes the earth tremble and the opposing army scatter.
External power and intensity can be immense, but Bhagavatam repeatedly guides the reader to look beyond violence to the deeper lesson of dharma and the ultimate supremacy of bhakti over mere strength.