Sauptika-parva Adhyāya 13 — Bhīmasena’s Pursuit of Drauṇi and the Release of a Divine Astra
तमभ्यधावत् कौन्तेय: प्रगृह्य सशरं धनु:
tam abhyadhāvat kaunteyaḥ pragṛhya saśaraṃ dhanuḥ
Sinabi ni Vaiśampāyana: Pagkaraan, sumugod patungo sa kanya ang anak ni Kuntī, tangan ang busog na may nakahandang mga palaso—kumilos nang may nagmamadaling pasya sa gitna ng karahasang sumunod sa digmaan, upang harapin nang tuwiran ang banta.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights decisive kṣatriya response to imminent danger: when adharma erupts in the chaos after battle, a protector must act swiftly—yet the broader Sauptika context also presses the ethical question of how far retaliation should go once war’s boundaries have collapsed.
Vaiśampāyana narrates that Kaunteya (understood here as Arjuna) charges toward the opponent, taking up his bow already furnished with arrows, signaling immediate readiness for confrontation in the tense events of the Sauptika episode.