Dama-pradhāna-dharma (Self-restraint as the Root of Dharma) — Śānti-parva 154
तेषां रुदितशब्देन गृश्रो5भ्येत्य वचो<ब्रवीत् । एकात्मजमिमं लोके त्यक्त्वा गच्छत मा चिरम्
teṣāṁ ruditāśabdena gṛdhro ’bhyetya vaco ’bravīt | ekātmajam imaṁ loke tyaktvā gacchata mā ciram ||
Bhishma said: Drawn by the sound of their weeping, a vulture came there and spoke: “O people, leave this only son here in the world and go back—do not delay. Here, thousands of women and men have already been brought by Time, and their brothers and kinsmen depart, leaving them behind.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse underscores the inevitability of death under the power of Kāla (Time) and urges detachment from possessive grief: even the dearest relations must ultimately be left behind, so one should not be immobilized by lamentation.
As people cry over a dead youth described as an only son, a vulture—attracted by the sound—approaches and delivers a stark admonition: countless beings have died here before, and their relatives have all departed, leaving the dead behind; therefore, they too should leave and not linger.