अश्मसारमयं नूनं॑ हृदयं मम संजय । श्रुत्वा विनिहतं भीष्मं शतधा यजन्न दीर्यते
aśmasāramayaṃ nūnaṃ hṛdayaṃ mama sañjaya | śrutvā vinihataṃ bhīṣmaṃ śatadhā yaj janna dīryate ||
Dhṛtarāṣṭra sprach: „Wahrlich, mein Herz ist aus Stein und Eisen, o Sañjaya; denn selbst als ich hörte, dass Bhīṣma niedergestreckt wurde, zerbricht es nicht in hundert Stücke. Der Schmerz müsste mich brechen, doch Anhaftung und Verblendung lassen mich unversehrt.“
धृतराष्ट उवाच
The verse highlights how attachment and delusion can harden the heart: even when confronted with a catastrophic loss (Bhīṣma’s fall), Dhṛtarāṣṭra recognizes a moral-emotional numbness in himself. It implicitly critiques inner blindness—when one’s conscience and compassion should break, they remain rigid due to long-cultivated partiality and adharma.
Sañjaya has reported to King Dhṛtarāṣṭra that Bhīṣma has been felled in battle. Dhṛtarāṣṭra reacts with astonished self-reproach, saying his heart must be stone-like because it does not shatter upon hearing of Bhīṣma’s downfall.