युद्धे अङ्गद-मैन्द-द्विविद-राक्षसयुद्धम्; कुम्भस्य प्रादुर्भावः तथा सुग्रीवेण पराभवः
Sarga 76: Angada and the Vanara chiefs battle Kampana, Prajaṅgha, Yūpākṣa, Śoṇitākṣa; Kumbha enters and is checked by Sugrīva
स धनुर्धन्विनांश्रेष्ठःप्रगृह्यसुसमाहितः ।मुमोचाशीविषप्रख्यान्शरान्देहविदारणान् ।।।।
sa dhanur dhanvināṃ śrēṣṭhaḥ pragṛhya susamāhitaḥ |
mumōcāśīviṣa-prakhyān śarān dēha-vidāraṇān ||
彼は—弓手の中の第一—静かに心を整えて弓を取り、毒蛇のごとき矢を放った。矢は身を裂き砕く力を備えていた。
He (Kumbha), the foremost wielder of bow, taking up the bow, remaining fully composed released arrows that resembled poisonous serpents capable of tearing the flesh.
Even in violence, the epic stresses self-control: action should be guided by a collected mind, not by chaos. Composure (samyama) is portrayed as a crucial discipline in war.
Kumbha, now poised to counterattack, calmly takes his bow and shoots fierce, body-tearing arrows into the battle.
Susaṃhati/samādhāna (composure, focused control) alongside martial skill.