बाहू धरण्यां निष्पिष्य सुदुर्मत्त इव द्विप: । प्रकीर्णान् मूर्थजान् धुन्वन् दन्तैर्दन्तानुपस्पृशन्
bāhū dharaṇyāṁ niṣpiṣya sudurmatta iva dvipaḥ | prakīrṇān mūrthajān dhunvan dantair dantān upaspṛśan
സഞ്ജയൻ പറഞ്ഞു—ഉന്മത്ത ഗജത്തെപ്പോലെ അവൻ ഭൂമിയിൽ തന്റെ ഭുജങ്ങൾ അമർത്തി പിഴിഞ്ഞു; ചിതറിയ കേശം കുലുക്കിക്കൊണ്ട് പല്ലുകൾ പല്ലിൽ അമർത്തി കടിച്ചുകീറി.
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores the psychological devastation of war: even powerful warriors can be reduced to uncontrolled, self-harming expressions of grief and rage. Ethically, it points to the inner cost of adharma-driven conflict—violence rebounds as suffering within the victor and the vanquished alike.
Sañjaya describes a warrior (implied from context) overwhelmed by emotion on the battlefield: he throws himself down, presses his arms into the ground, shakes his disordered hair, and grinds his teeth—likened to a frenzied elephant.