Chapter 59: Baladeva’s Censure, Keśava’s Restraint, and Yudhiṣṭhira’s Moral Accounting
तान् वयं प्रतिनृत्याम: पुनर्गौरिति गौरिति । जिन मूर्खोने पहले हमें “बैल-बैल' कहकर नृत्य किया था, आज उन्हें “बैल-बैल' कहकर उस अपमानका बदला लेते हुए हम भी प्रसन्नतासे नाच रहे हैं
tān vayaṁ pratinṛtyāmaḥ punar gaur iti gaur iti |
Sañjaya said: “Now we are dancing back at them, again and again crying, ‘Ox! Ox!’—repaying the insult. For those foolish men had earlier mocked us by dancing and shouting ‘Ox! Ox!’; today, taking revenge for that humiliation, we too dance with satisfaction.”
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how humiliation in war easily turns into retaliatory mockery: insult invites counter-insult, showing the ethical danger of letting anger and wounded pride govern speech and conduct.
Sanjaya reports a scene of derision: one side had earlier mocked the other by dancing and shouting “gaur, gaur” (“Ox! Ox!”). Now the mocked party, feeling the tables have turned, returns the same taunt while dancing in triumph.