नलस्य बाहुकत्वेन ऋतुपर्णनगरप्रवेशः
Nala as Bāhuka enters Ṛtuparṇa’s city
श्रुत्वारण्ये विलपितं न मामाश्वासयत्ययम् । यात्येतां स्वादुसलिलामापगां सागरंगमाम्
śrutvāraṇye vilapitaṃ na mām āśvāsayaty ayam | yāty etāṃ svādusalilām āpagāṃ sāgaraṅgamām ||
قال بْرِهَدَشْفَا: «بعد أن سمعتُ هذا النحيب في الغابة، لم يأتِني منه عزاء. إنها تمضي في جريانها—هذه النهرُ العذبُ الماء—متجهةً إلى البحر.»
बृहृदश्च उवाच
The verse highlights how raw grief can resist consolation: even after hearing lamentation, the speaker finds no inner relief. The river flowing inevitably to the ocean serves as an image of unstoppable movement—suggesting that sorrow, time, and events may continue onward despite one’s wish to halt them.
Bṛhadaśva responds to lamentation heard in the forest. He remarks that it does not console him, and he points to (or evokes) a sweet-watered river that continues its course toward the sea, using the natural scene to frame the emotional moment.