Udyoga Parva, Adhyāya 73 — Kr̥ṣṇa’s Appraisal of Bhīma’s Altered Temper and Reaffirmation of Martial Resolve
पूर्वकालमें पुत्र तथा बन्धु-बान्धवोंसहित कौरव और हमलोग इन्द्र आदि देवताओंकी भाँति परस्पर मिलकर बड़ी प्रसन्नता और आनन्दके साथ रहते थे ।।
pūrvakāle putra-tathā bandhu-bāndhava-sahitaḥ kauravāś ca vayam ca indra-ādi-devatā iva parasparaṃ militvā mahā-prasannatāyāṃ ca ānande ca avasāma ||
duryodhanasya krodhena bharata madhusūdana |
dhakṣyante śiśirāpāye vanānīva hutāśanaiḥ ||
parantu madhusūdana! yathā śiśirasya ante (grīṣma-kāla āgacchati) vanāni dāvāgninā dahyante, tathā sarve bharatavaṃśyāḥ idānīṃ duryodhanasya krodhāgninā dahyamānā bhaviṣyanti ||
Bhīma dijo: «Antes, con nuestros hijos y parientes, los Kauravas y nosotros vivíamos en mutua armonía—como Indra y los demás dioses—encontrándonos con gran alegría y gozo. Pero ahora, oh Madhusūdana, por la ira de Duryodhana, los Bhāratas serán consumidos: así como los bosques, al final del invierno, arden por el fuego, así arderá toda la estirpe de Bharata en el incendio de la cólera de Duryodhana».
भीम उवाच
Uncontrolled anger in a leader becomes a destructive force that can consume an entire family and polity; Bhima frames Duryodhana’s wrath as a ‘fire’ that threatens collective ruin, urging ethical restraint and wise counsel.
Bhima recalls an earlier time when Kauravas and their kin lived together happily, then contrasts it with the present crisis: Duryodhana’s rage has made reconciliation fragile, and Bhima warns Krishna that the Bharata clan is on the verge of being burned up by that anger—an omen of impending war.