Adhyāya 104 — Śikhaṇḍin-puraskāraḥ (Śikhaṇḍin as Vanguard) and Bhīṣma’s Counter-Advance
शैनेयो5पि ततः क्रुद्धक्षापमानम्य वेगवान् । गौतमान्तकरं तूर्ण समाधत्त शिलीमुखम्,तब वेगशाली सात्यकिने भी क्रोधमें भरकर अपने धनुषको झुकाया और तुरंत ही उसपर कृपाचार्यका अन्त करनेवाला बाण रखा
śaineyo 'pi tataḥ kruddhaḥ kṣāpamānamya vegavān | gautamāntakaraṃ tūrṇaṃ samādhatta śilīmukham ||
แล้วศૈเนยะ (สาตยกี) ผู้ว่องไวก็เดือดดาล เขางอคันศรด้วยแรง และรีบสอดศรคม “ศิลีมุขะ” อันมุ่งหมายให้เป็นเหตุแห่งความพินาศของโคตมะ (กฤปะ)
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how anger (krodha) can harden intention and accelerate violence in war, pushing a warrior toward extreme acts even against respected elders. It implicitly warns that battlefield duty (kṣatriya-dharma) can collide with ethical restraint, making inner discipline crucial.
Sañjaya narrates that Sātyaki, called Śaineya, becomes enraged, bends his bow with force, and quickly fits a sharp arrow intended to kill Kṛpācārya (identified as Gautama’s son). It marks an escalation in the duel and Sātyaki’s lethal resolve.