स्वर्गगमनम्, अदितिस्तुतिः-मायातत्त्वम्, तथा पारिजात-प्रसङ्गे इन्द्रयुद्धम्
चकार शङ्खनिर्घोषं दिशः शब्देन पूरयन् मुमोच च शरव्रातं सहस्रायुतसंमितम्
cakāra śaṅkhanirghoṣaṃ diśaḥ śabdena pūrayan mumoca ca śaravrātaṃ sahasrāyutasaṃmitam
اس نے شंख کی گرج دار صدا بلند کی، جس سے تمام سمتیں گونج اٹھیں؛ اور اس نے ہزاروں اور دَس ہزاروں کے برابر تیروں کی بوچھاڑ چھوڑ دی۔
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
In this verse, the conch’s roar functions as a royal and divine proclamation—an audible sign of command that fills the quarters, marking the onset of decisive action aligned with dharma.
Parāśara presents overwhelming force—like countless arrows—not as mere violence but as the ordered might of the Supreme (Vishnu/Krishna) acting to re-establish rightful order and subdue adharmic opposition.
Krishna’s conch and arrows symbolize omnipotent sovereignty: the Supreme Being manifests within history to protect dharma, demonstrating that divine governance can operate through heroic, world-restoring action.