अद्येन्द्रवैवस्वतविष्णुमित्रसाध्याश्चवैश्वानरचन्द्रसूर्याः ।द्रक्ष्यन्तुमेविक्रममप्रमेयंविष्णोरिवोग्रंबलियज्ञवाटे ।।।।
adyendra-vaivasvata-viṣṇu-mitra-sādhyāś ca vaiśvānara-candra-sūryāḥ |
drakṣyantu me vikramam aprameyaṃ
viṣṇor ivograṃ baliyajñavāṭe ||
ഇന്ന് ഇന്ദ്രൻ, വൈവസ്വതൻ, വിഷ്ണു, മിത്രൻ, സാധ്യഗണം, വൈശ്വാനരൻ, ചന്ദ്രൻ, സൂര്യൻ—എന്റെ അപ്രമേയ വിക്രമം ദർശിക്കട്ടെ; ബലിയുടെ യജ്ഞവാടത്തിൽ വിഷ്ണുവിന്റെ ഉഗ്രബലം അവർ കണ്ടതുപോലെ.
"This weapon of him (Indrajith) is that of the glorious creator and is presided by Him. By that reason he is inconceivable. O! Wise Lakshmana, remain calm and undisturbed at this hail of arrows."
It warns against hubris: invoking gods as witnesses to one’s own greatness reflects ego rather than dharma; the Ramayana repeatedly treats pride as a seed of downfall.
Indrajit proclaims a boast, calling cosmic beings to witness his valor, comparing it to Viṣṇu’s famed act at Bali’s sacrifice.
By contrast (negative exemplar), the verse highlights the absence of humility—showing how adharma can cloak itself in sacred references.