Adhyāya 168: Arjuna’s counters to māyā-rains and the onset of darkness
Nivātakavaca engagement
जग्रास प्रसभं तानि सर्वाण्यस्त्राणि मे नृप । तेषु सर्वेषु जग्धेषु ब्रह्मास्त्र महदादिशम्
arjuna uvāca |
jagrāsa prasabhaṃ tāni sarvāṇy astrāṇi me nṛpa |
teṣu sarveṣu jagdheṣu brahmāstraṃ mahad ādiśam ||
អర్జុនបានទូលថា៖ «បពិត្រព្រះរាជា! គាត់បានលេបក吞យកអាវុធទាំងអស់របស់ខ្ញុំដោយកម្លាំង។ ពេលអាវុធទាំងនោះត្រូវបានគាត់បំផ្លាញសព្វគ្រប់ហើយ ខ្ញុំបានបញ្ចេញព្រះអាស្ត្រាដ៏មហិមា គឺ ព្រហ្មាស្ត្រ (Brahmāstra)»។
अजुन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical tension in warfare: when ordinary means are rendered ineffective, a warrior may feel compelled to escalate to extreme force. It implicitly raises the dharmic question of proportionality and restraint—invoking a supreme weapon like the Brahmāstra is a grave step, justified only under exceptional necessity.
Arjuna reports to a king that his opponent neutralized (as if ‘swallowed’) all the weapons Arjuna had deployed. With his arsenal thus rendered useless, Arjuna responds by releasing the powerful Brahmāstra as a decisive countermeasure.