द्वादशः सर्गः — Kaikeyi’s Boons and Dasaratha’s Moral Collapse (Ayodhya Kanda 12)
प्रताम्य वा प्रज्वल वा प्रणश्य वा सहस्रशो वा स्फुटिता महीं व्रज।न ते करिष्यामि वच स्सुदारुणं ममाहितं केकयराजपांसनि।।।।
pratāmya vā prajvala vā praṇaśya vā sahasraśo vā sphuṭitā mahīṃ vraja |
na te kariṣyāmi vacaḥ sudāruṇaṃ mamāhitaṃ kekayarājapāṃsani ||
Grieve if you will, burn if you will, perish if you will—even if you were to fall upon the earth shattered into a thousand pieces: I will not carry out your terrible, harmful demand, O disgrace upon the house of Kekaya.
O obloquy on the house of Kekaya, you may grieve or burn yourself in the fire, or get destroyed. Even if you fall down on earth broken into a thousand pieces I will not act on your terrible, harmful words.
It asserts moral resistance to harmful commands: dharma includes refusing actions perceived as destructive, even under emotional coercion.
Daśaratha vehemently rejects Kaikeyī’s insistence, declaring he will not comply even if she threatens self-harm or destruction.
Moral resolve (dharma-niṣṭhā) is foregrounded—though expressed in anger, the stance is framed as refusal of an ‘ahita’ (harmful) act.