उष्णीषे परिगृलह्लीतां माद्रीपुत्रावुभी तथा । स्त्रियः कौरवनाथस्य भीष्मं कुरुकुलोद्वहम्
uṣṇīṣe parigṛhītāṁ mādrīputrāv ubhī tathā | striyaḥ kauravanāthasya bhīṣmaṁ kurukulodvaham ||
Vaiśampāyana dijo: Las mujeres de la casa de Kuru, bajo el señorío de los Kaurava, también asieron el tocado de los dos hijos de Mādrī y así se acercaron a Bhīṣma, el más excelso sostén del linaje Kuru: un gesto ritual de súplica y duelo tras la catástrofe de la dinastía.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights a social-ethical moment: in crisis, the Kuru women turn to Bhīṣma as the senior moral authority and symbolic pillar of the dynasty. Their physical act of grasping (by the head-dress) conveys urgent supplication, underscoring the Mahābhārata theme that dharma is often sought from elders when the family order collapses.
Vaiśampāyana narrates that the women associated with the Kaurava household seize hold of the two sons of Mādrī—Nakula and Sahadeva—by their head-dress and, in that state of distress, approach Bhīṣma, described as the foremost upholder of the Kuru line.