ग्रसमानमनीकानि नरवारणवाजिनाम् । पश्यामीवाग्रतो भीम॑ क्रोधमूर्च्छितमाहवे,मुझे अपने सामने दीख-सा रहा है कि भीमसेन युद्धमें क्रोधसे मूर्च्छित हो मनुष्य, हाथी और घोड़ोंकी (समस्त) सेनाओंको कालका ग्रास बनाता जा रहा है
grasamānam anīkāni naravāraṇavājinām | paśyāmīva agrato bhīmaṁ krodhamūrcchitam āhave ||
Dhṛtarāṣṭra berkata: “Seolah-olah aku melihat Bhīma di hadapanku—di tengah medan perang, dirasuk dan dikuasai amarah—melahap barisan manusia, gajah dan kuda, menjadikan seluruh bala tentera mangsa Maut.”
धृतराष्ट उवाच
The verse highlights how unchecked anger (krodha) can overwhelm discernment and turn a warrior into an instrument of destruction, suggesting an ethical warning: even within kṣatriya duty, wrath-driven violence accelerates ruin and invites the shadow of Kāla (Death/time).
Dhṛtarāṣṭra expresses a vivid, fearful premonition: he imagines Bhīma in the coming war, maddened by anger, tearing through the enemy’s battle-formations—men, elephants, and horses—so relentlessly that the armies seem to be swallowed by Death.