ब्राह्मणपूजा-राजधर्मः | Royal Duty of Honoring Learned Brahmins
अस्येदानीं वधादद्य भविष्याम्यनृण: पितु: । इतना ही नहीं
asyedānīṁ vadhād adya bhaviṣyāmy anṛṇaḥ pituḥ |
Bhishma dijo: «Si hoy lo mato, por fin quedaré libre de mi deuda hacia mi padre. Y no sólo eso: sus hijos han devastado todo el reino de la región de Kāśī y han saqueado el tesoro de joyas acumuladas. Henchido de orgullo, ya he dado muerte a los cien hijos del rey; sólo éstos quedan. Si ahora los mato también, ¿quedaré absuelto de mi obligación para con mi padre?»
भीष्म उवाच
The passage frames violence within the moral language of ṛṇa (obligation): Bhīṣma interprets his duty to his father as a binding debt that can be ‘discharged’ through decisive action. It highlights the tension between personal vows/filial duty and the ethical weight of killing, especially when justified as restoring order after plunder and arrogance.
Bhīṣma speaks about completing an act of retribution: after the king’s sons have ravaged Kāśī and looted treasures, he claims to have already killed a hundred of them, with only a few remaining. He considers killing the rest ‘today’ so that he may become anṛṇa—free of his debt to his father.