तेषामतिव्याहरतां शस्त्रवर्ष प्रमुकचताम् । प्रममाथोत्तमाड़्नि बीभत्सुर्निशितै: शरै:
teṣām ativyāharatāṁ śastravarṣa-pramucchatām | pramamāthottamāṅgāni bībhatsur niśitaiḥ śaraiḥ ||
当他们高声夸耀,开始如雨倾泻兵刃之时,战场上可怖的阿周那以锋利如剃刀的箭矢,斩落了他们首领的头颅。
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse contrasts boastful aggression with disciplined martial efficacy: prideful display (ativyāhāra) and indiscriminate weapon-rain (śastravarṣa) are met by a warrior’s precise, decisive action. Ethically, it warns that arrogance in violence invites swift consequences, while skill and resolve determine outcomes in dharmic warfare.
Opponents, shouting boasts, unleash a barrage of weapons. Arjuna (called Bībhatsu) responds by shooting keen arrows that strike down their heads—depicting a sudden turning of the fight through his superior archery.