Uttarā-vilāpaḥ and Kṛṣṇasya satya-vacanenābhi-mañyu-jasyābhijīvanam
Uttarā’s Lament and the Revival of Abhimanyu’s Son by Krishna’s Truth-Act
पुण्डरीकाक्ष पश्यावां बालेन हि विनाकृतौ । अभिमन्युं च मां चैव हतौ तुल्यं जनार्दन
puṇḍarīkākṣa paśyāvāṃ bālena hi vinākṛtau | abhimanyuṃ ca māṃ caiva hatau tulyaṃ janārdana ||
Vaiśampāyana dit : «Ô Janārdana aux yeux de lotus, vois : nous voilà tous deux privés d’enfant. Abhimanyu est tombé, et moi aussi je suis comme morte, terrassée par le chagrin. Ainsi, à même mesure, nous sommes devenus la proie de la Mort.»
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights how death in war and death-by-grief can be ethically and existentially equivalent: even when a warrior attains heroic death, the survivors may be ‘killed’ by sorrow. It underscores compassion as a necessary complement to dharma, acknowledging the human cost of righteous conflict.
A lament is voiced to Kṛṣṇa (addressed as Puṇḍarīkākṣa/Janārdana): Abhimanyu has been slain, and the speaker declares herself equally destroyed by grief, emphasizing that both—fallen son and grieving mother—are alike overtaken by Death.