Adhyāya 6: Śibira-dvāra-sthita Bhūta-varṇana and Aśvatthāmā’s Śaraṇāgati to Mahādeva
अग्रसत् तांस्तथाभूतं द्रौणिना प्रहितान् शरान् । अश्वत्थामा तु सम्प्रेक्ष्य शरौघांस्तान् निरर्थकान्
agrasat tāṁs tathābhūtaṁ drauṇinā prahitān śarān | aśvatthāmā tu samprekṣya śaraughāṁs tān nirarthakān
三阇耶说道:它就这样吞噬了德罗那之子射出的那些箭。阿湿婆陀摩见自己箭雨尽成徒然,便察觉其无效,在夜战的狂烈之中重新思量对策。
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the moral and practical futility of uncontrolled violence: when aggression fails to achieve its aim, it often escalates into more extreme, ethically darker choices—an implicit warning about how adharma grows when restraint and right judgment are abandoned.
During the Sauptika events, Aśvatthāmā’s arrows—shot as an attack—are repelled. Observing that his arrow-storm is ineffective, he recognizes its futility, setting the stage for a shift in tactics amid the night’s conflict.