न जहीौ पुत्रशोकार्ता जरिता खाण्डवे सुतान् । बभार चैतान् संजातान् स्ववृत्त्या स््नेहविप्लवा
Vaiśampāyana uvāca: na jahau putraśokārtā Jaritā Khāṇḍave sutān | babhāra caitān saṃjātān svavṛttyā snehaviplavā ||
Vaiśampāyana said: Overwhelmed by grief for her children, Jaritā did not abandon her sons in the Khāṇḍava forest. Swayed and shaken by maternal affection, she sustained and reared those newborns by her own means, refusing to treat them as cast away.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights an ethical impulse aligned with dharma: the vulnerable—especially newborn children—are not to be discarded. Even amid grief and hardship, Jaritā’s steadfast care models responsibility and compassion, showing how parental duty can override abandonment.
In the Khāṇḍava forest episode, Jaritā, distressed for her offspring, refuses to leave her newborn sons behind. Overcome by affection, she continues to sustain and raise them through her own efforts.