भीष्मस्योत्तरायणप्रतीक्षा तथा युधिष्ठिरागमनम् | Bhīṣma’s uttarāyaṇa moment and Yudhiṣṭhira’s arrival
चिन्तितानि समेष्यन्ति शस्त्राण्यस्त्राणि चैव ह । अनन्तश्न स एवोक्तो भगवान् हरिरव्यय:
cintitāni sameṣyanti śastrāṇy astrāṇi caiva ha | anantaśna sa evokto bhagavān harir avyayaḥ ||
Ao apenas pensá-las, todas as armas divinas—tanto as de combate quanto as de arremesso—virão a ele. E, de fato, o Senhor Hari, imperecível, é declarado ser o próprio Ananta (Śeṣa), o Infinito.
ईश्वर उवाच
The verse emphasizes that divine aid is accessed through inner remembrance and reliance on the Supreme: when one mentally invokes the divine, the needed powers and protections ‘arrive’ without external striving. It also identifies Hari with Ananta-Śeṣa, highlighting the Lord’s inexhaustible, sustaining nature.
Īśvara (the Lord) declares a boon-like assurance: merely by thinking, the full array of divine weapons—both śastra and astra—will become available. The statement is reinforced by a theological identification: the imperishable Bhagavān Hari is spoken of as Ananta (Śeṣa), the endless support of the cosmos.