Duryodhana’s Anxiety, Bhīṣma’s Reassurance, and Renewed Mobilization (दुर्योधनचिन्ता–भीष्मप्रत्याश्वासन–सेनानिर्गमनम्)
सत्यव्रतं च सप्तत्या विद्ध्वा शक्रसमो युधि । नृत्यन्निव रणे वीर आर्ति न: समजीजनत्
satyavrataṃ ca saptatyā viddhvā śakrasamo yudhi | nṛtyann iva raṇe vīra ārtim naḥ samajījanat ||
三阇耶说道:阿毗曼纽在战场上如同因陀罗般勇猛,以七十箭射伤萨提亚弗拉塔;他在阵中穿梭,宛若起舞,以其威势使我们众人都陷入极深的痛苦。
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the double-edged nature of martial excellence: extraordinary valor and skill (likened to Indra) can simultaneously become the direct cause of widespread anguish in war. It implicitly points to the ethical cost of battle—glory for the warrior, suffering for those who face him.
Sañjaya reports that Abhimanyu strikes the warrior Satyavrata with seventy arrows. Abhimanyu then ranges across the battlefield with such swift, confident movement that it appears like dancing, and his onslaught causes severe distress to the opposing side.