तत्रैकबाणनिहतानपश्याम महागजान् । पतितान् पात्यमानांश्व निर्भिनज्नान् सव्यसाचिना,वहाँ हमने देखा कि सव्यसाची अर्जुके एक ही बाणकी चोट खाकर बड़े-बड़े हाथियोंके शरीर विदीर्ण होकर गिर गये हैं और लगातार गिराये जा रहे हैं
tatraika-bāṇa-nihatān apaśyāma mahā-gajān | patitān pātyamānāṁś ca nirbhinna-jñān savyasācinā ||
तत्रैकबाणनिहतानपश्याम महागजान् । पतितान् पात्यमानांश्च निर्भिन्नान् सव्यसाचिना ॥
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the awe-inspiring power of a warrior’s skill and the stark reality of war: even the mightiest beings can be destroyed instantly. Implicitly, it invites reflection on the ethical gravity of battlefield action, even when undertaken as kṣatriya-dharma.
Sañjaya reports what was witnessed on the battlefield: Arjuna (called Savyasācin) is felling huge elephants with single arrows; some lie already dead while others are still being brought down, their bodies visibly torn by the strikes.