विमुज्चन्तं शरान् घोरान् दिव्यान्यस्त्राणि चाहवे । जेतुं पुरुषशार्दूलं शार्टूलमिव वेगिनम्
vimuñcantaṃ śarān ghorān divyāny astrāṇi cāhave | jetuṃ puruṣaśārdūlaṃ śārdūlam iva veginam | siṃhake samāna-vegāśālī puruṣasiṃhaḥ karṇaḥ yadā svaṃ vipulaṃ dhanuḥ kampayan raṇabhūmau divyāstrāṇi ca bhayaṅkarān bāṇān ca vimuñcati, tadā taṃ kaḥ jetuṃ śaknoti?
Вайшампаяна сказал: Когда Карна — лев среди людей, стремительный как тигр и могучий как лев — сотрясал свой великий лук и на поле брани выпускал грозные стрелы, пуская в ход небесные оружия, кто мог бы тогда одолеть его?
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the awe inspired by extraordinary power in war—especially when a warrior commands divine weapons—while implicitly reminding the reader that apparent invincibility in battle does not erase the ethical weight of violence or the larger forces (vows, destiny, dharma) that shape outcomes in the Mahābhārata.
Vaiśampāyana describes Karṇa in peak combat form: he shakes his great bow and showers the battlefield with fearsome arrows and celestial missiles. The narration is a rhetorical praise meant to convey that, at that moment, defeating Karṇa seemed nearly impossible.