HomeRamayanaAyodhya KandaSarga 20Shloka 2.20.32
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Shloka 2.20.32

अयोध्याकाण्डे विंशः सर्गः — Rama Enters Kauśalyā’s Antaḥpura; Ritual Preparations and the Shock of Exile

सा निकृत्तेव सालस्य यष्टिः परशुना वने।पपात सहसा देवी देवतेव दिवश्च्युता।।।।

sā nikṛtteva sālasya yaṣṭiḥ paraśunā vane | papāta sahasā devī devateva divaś cyutā ||

Then that noble lady suddenly fell—like a sāla-branch cut in the forest by an axe, like a goddess dropped from heaven.

All on a sidden Kausalya fell down on the ground like the branch of a sal tree in the forest severed by an axe, like a goddess dropped from heaven.

K
Kausalya
S
sāla tree
A
axe (paraśu)
H
heaven (divaḥ)

The verse highlights the human cost of dharma-bound decisions: righteous commitments can still cause profound suffering, which the epic asks us to acknowledge rather than deny.

On hearing Rama’s exile, Kausalya is overwhelmed and collapses suddenly.

Not a virtue but a truthful portrayal of maternal attachment and shock—an ethical realism about grief.