निर्मुक्तानां पन्नगानां सरूपा दृष्टवा शक्तीहेंमचित्रा निकृत्ता: । प्रादुश्चक्रे दिव्यमस्त्रं महात्मा क्रोधाविष्टो हैहयेशप्रमाथी
nirmuktānāṁ pannagānāṁ sarūpā dṛṣṭvā śaktī hema-citrā nikṛttāḥ | prāduścakre divyam astraṁ mahātmā krodhāviṣṭo haihayeśa-pramāthī ||
Bhīṣma disse: “Vendo as śaktis decepadas—adornadas de ouro, brilhando com desenhos variados—espalhadas pelo chão como serpentes que largaram a pele, o guerreiro magnânimo, tomado de ira, ele que esmagara o senhor dos Haihayas, fez surgir uma arma divina.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights how anger can unleash formidable, even ‘divine’ force in warfare, but implicitly warns that power arising from wrath is ethically dangerous; a dharmic warrior must strive to keep judgment and restraint even amid provocation.
After seeing severed, gold-decorated spears strewn about—likened to snakes’ shed skins—the great warrior (described as a crusher of the Haihaya lord) becomes enraged and brings forth a celestial weapon, escalating the conflict.