प्रत्यक्षमेतद् भवतां यद् वृत्तं कुरुसंसदि । यथा चाशिटष्टवन्मन्दो रोषादद्य समुत्थित:
pratyakṣam etad bhavatāṃ yad vṛttaṃ kurusaṃsadi | yathā cāśiṭaṣṭavan mando roṣād adya samutthitaḥ ||
কুৰুসভাত যি ঘটিল, সেয়া আপোনালোকে প্ৰত্যক্ষ দেখিছে; আৰু সেই মন্দবুদ্ধি মানুহজন আজি ক্ৰোধত, যেন তিৰস্কৃত হোৱা মানুহৰ দৰে, উঠি দাঁড়াইছে।
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse underscores moral accountability in public life: when events are pratyakṣa—plainly witnessed by elders—anger-driven reactions and foolish posturing cannot be excused as ignorance. Public wrongdoing in the sabhā becomes a shared ethical concern, demanding discernment and restraint.
Vaiśaṃpāyana reminds the listeners that the incident in the Kuru court was seen directly by those present. He describes a “dull” person who, as if previously rebuked, has now risen in anger—signaling a tense turn in the assembly’s deliberations and the worsening atmosphere that leads toward conflict.