ततो रुधिरतर्षेण बलिना शरभो<न्वित:
tato rudhiratarṣeṇa balinā śarabho'nvitaḥ
Then, driven by a thirst for blood, the powerful one—endowed with the nature of a śarabha—advanced, his strength sharpened by violent craving. The line underscores how unchecked passion can transform power into destructive ferocity, a warning relevant to Bhīṣma’s ethical instruction.
भीष्म उवाच
Power becomes ethically dangerous when fueled by craving—here symbolized as a “thirst for blood.” Bhīṣma’s broader instruction in Śānti Parva repeatedly stresses restraint (dama) and the governance of impulses as essential to dharma, especially for rulers and the strong.
Bhīṣma describes a figure whose strength is intensified by violent desire, likened to or accompanied by the fierce śarabha. The phrase functions as a vivid narrative image of escalating aggression within an instructive discourse.