Somadatta’s Kṣātra-Dharma Accusation; Night Combat, Māyā, and the Fall of Ghaṭotkaca
Droṇa-parva, Adhyāya 131
तस्य भीमो भशं क्रुद्धस्त्रीन शरान् नतपर्वण: । निचखानोरसि क्रुद्ध: सूतपुत्रस्य वेगत:
tasya bhīmo bhṛśaṁ kruddhas trīn śarān nataparvaṇaḥ | nicakhānorasi kruddhaḥ sūtaputrasya vegataḥ ||
Sañjaya berkata: Lalu Bhīma, yang menyala oleh amarah, menghunjamkan tiga anak panah beruas bengkok dengan laju yang dahsyat ke dada putera Sūta itu.
संजय उवाच
The verse implicitly warns how krodha (anger) amplifies harm: even within a duty-bound battle, rage accelerates violence and narrows ethical perception, making action more driven by passion than discernment.
Sañjaya narrates that Bhīma, in great fury, shoots and plants three swift, well-made arrows into the chest of Karṇa (called ‘the Sūta’s son’), marking an intense exchange in the Drona Parva battle.