अक्षवधः (The Slaying of Prince Aksha)
Sundarakāṇḍa Sarga 47
ततस्स वीरस्सुमुखान् पतत्रिणस्सुवर्णपुङ्खान्सविषानिवोरगान्।समाधिसम्योगविमोक्षतत्त्वविच्छरानथ त्रीन्कपिमूर्ध्न्यपातयत्।।5.47.14।।
tatas sa vīraḥ sumukhān patatriṇaḥ suvarṇa-puṅkhān sa-viṣān ivoragān |
samādhi-saṁyoga-vimokṣa-tattva-vit śarān atha trīn kapi-mūrdhny apātayat || 5.47.14 ||
Pagkaraan, ang magiting na Akṣa—dalubhasa sa pagpapakawala ng mga sandata sa puspos na pagtutok—ay nagbagsak sa ulo ng kapi ng tatlong palasong may magagandang balahibo at gintong katawan, na may lason na parang mga ahas.
Heroic Aksha, who was good at targeting correctly, with due concentration struck the vanara on his head with three golden-shafted, winged arrows with feathers smeared with poison which resembled serpents.
The verse highlights disciplined skill (samādhi) in action; ethically, it raises the tension between prowess and propriety—poisoned weapons signal a harsher mode of warfare often associated with adharma in epic sensibility.
Akṣa lands a direct hit on Hanumān’s head with three arrows, described as poison-smeared and serpent-like.
Technical mastery and concentration in combat—precision under pressure.