Daiva–Puruṣakāra Discourse and the Elephant-Corps Engagement (भीमगजानीक-सम्भ्रान्ति)
अश्वाज्जघान समरे भीमसेनस्य सायकै: । शक्रदेवने समरभूमिमें बहुत-से सायकोंकी वर्षा करते हुए उन सायकोंद्वारा भीमसेनके घोड़ोंको मार डाला
aśvāj jaghāna samare bhīmasenasya sāyakaiḥ | śakradevane samarabhūmau bahu-śaḥ sāyakān varṣayan taiḥ sāyakair bhīmasenasya aśvān jaghāna |
散阇耶说道:在鏖战之中,他万箭齐发,如雨倾注,以那些箭矢射杀了毗摩塞那的战马。此事凸显战争的残酷精确:夺其机动、断其驰骋,便成了决定胜负的阴冷手段——当战场上日常的伦理约束崩塌之时尤为如此。
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights a harsh battlefield ethic: victory often turns on tactical choices like crippling an enemy’s chariot by killing its horses. It reflects how, in war, strategic necessity can override gentler moral instincts, even while remaining within the broader frame of kṣatriya conduct.
Sañjaya reports that, amid intense fighting, an unnamed warrior (described through an Indra-like simile) rains arrows and kills Bhīma’s horses, effectively disabling Bhīmasena’s chariot and shifting the immediate advantage in the encounter.