भीष्मवधोपाय-प्रश्नः (Inquiry into the means to overcome Bhīṣma) | Chapter 103
त॑ श्रुत्वा निनदं घोरं तव सैन्यस्थ भारत । मारुतोद्धूतवेगस्य सागरस्येव पर्वणि,भरतवंशी नरेश! पूर्णिमाके दिन वायुके थपेड़ोंसे उद्वेलित हुए समुद्रकी गर्जनाके समान आपकी सेनाका वह भयंकर चीत्कार सुनकर उस समय दुर्योधनने राक्षस ऋष्यशंगपुत्र अलम्बुषसे इस प्रकार कहा--“महाबाहो! यह अर्जुनका पुत्र द्वितीय अर्जुनके समान पराक्रमी है
taṁ śrutvā ninadaṁ ghoraṁ tava sainyastha bhārata | mārutoddhūta-vegasya sāgarasyeva parvaṇi ||
Sinabi ni Sañjaya: O hari ng angkang Bharata, nang marinig ang nakapanghihilakbot na ugong na iyon mula sa iyong hukbo, ito’y gaya ng dagundong ng dagat sa pagtaas ng tubig sa araw ng kabilugan ng buwan, kapag ang alon ay pinupukaw nang marahas ng hangin. Sa sandaling iyon, si Duryodhana, na ginising ng kaguluhan ng labanan, ay nagsalita kay Alambusha—ang rakshasa, anak ni Ṛśyaśṛṅga—tungkol sa lakas ng anak ni Arjuna, at itinulad siya sa isang ikalawang Arjuna.
संजय उवाच
The verse uses a powerful simile to show how collective violence and fear amplify in war: the army’s roar becomes ocean-like when driven by the ‘wind’ of agitation. Ethically, it highlights how conflict magnifies passions (krodha, bhaya, utsāha), often overwhelming discernment and drawing leaders into escalating responses.
Sanjaya reports to Dhritarashtra that a terrifying uproar rises within the Kaurava forces, likened to the ocean’s thunder at full-moon tide under strong winds. In the immediate narrative flow (as reflected in the accompanying prose), Duryodhana reacts to the battlefield situation and addresses the rakshasa warrior Alambusha, speaking of Arjuna’s son as being as formidable as a ‘second Arjuna.’