Adhyāya 6: Śibira-dvāra-sthita Bhūta-varṇana and Aśvatthāmā’s Śaraṇāgati to Mahādeva
तस्या: फलमिदं घोर प्रतिघाताय कल्पते । तदिदं दैवविहितं मम संख्ये निवर्तनम्
tasyāḥ phalam idaṃ ghoraṃ pratighātāya kalpate | tad idaṃ daivavihitaṃ mama saṅkhye nivartanam ||
قال سنجيا: «هذه ثمرةٌ مروِّعة لذلك المسلك الضالّ؛ لقد عادت لتضرب ضربًا شديدًا جزاءً وانتقامًا. وهكذا فإن انسحابي من ساحة القتال قد قُضي به من قِبَل القدر نفسه.»
संजय उवाच
Actions driven by impure or unrighteous intent ripen into fearful consequences; what appears as a sudden reversal in war can be understood as the ordained fruition (phala) of prior moral deviation, framed as fate (daiva) bringing retribution (pratighāta).
Sañjaya comments that a dreadful outcome has manifested as a counter-blow, and he interprets his turning back from the battlefield as something determined by divine dispensation—an inevitable consequence unfolding within the war’s moral causality.