अध्याय ९ — दुर्योधनस्य अन्त्यावस्था, विलापः, तथा सौप्तिक-प्रतिवृत्तम्
Duryodhana’s Final Condition, Lamentation, and the Night’s Report
उपासत द्विजा: पूर्वमर्थहेतोर्यमी श्वरम् उपासते च तं हाद्य क्रव्यादा मांसहेतव:
upāsata dvijāḥ pūrvam arthahator yamīśvaram | upāsate ca taṃ hādya kravyādā māṃsahetavaḥ ||
قال كريپا: «كان البرهمنة من قبل يجلسون في خدمة ذلك الملك طلبًا للمال والرعاية. أمّا اليوم، ففي الموضع نفسه، تجلس قربه الكواسر وآكلات اللحم، لا يجذبها إلا طمعُ اللحم.»
कृप उवाच
The verse contrasts two kinds of ‘attendance’ on power—earlier, brahmins seeking wealth and royal favor; now, flesh-eaters seeking meat—highlighting how violence and the collapse of dharma degrade a royal court from a place of patronage and counsel into a site of death and predation.
In the Sauptika Parva’s aftermath of the night massacre, Kṛpa laments the changed condition around the fallen ruler: where learned men once gathered for support and gifts, scavengers and predators now gather, drawn by corpses—an image of the battlefield’s grim reversal of social order.