Babhruvāhana’s Lament and Appeal for Expiation (प्रायश्चित्त-याचना)
व्यादिशन्तु च किं विप्रा: प्रायश्ित्तमिहाद्य मे । सुनृशंसस्य पापस्य पितृहन्तू रणाजिरे,'ब्राह्मणो! मैं अत्यन्त क्रूर, पापी और समरांगणमें पिताकी हत्या करनेवाला हूँ। बताइये, मेरे लिये अब यहाँ कौन-सा प्रायश्रित्त है?
vyādiśantu ca kiṁ viprāḥ prāyaścittam ihādya me | sunṛśaṁsasya pāpasya pitṛhantū raṇājire ||
Vaiśampāyana dit : «Ô brāhmaṇas, prescrivez-moi, ici et maintenant, l’expiation, le prāyaścitta. Je suis d’une cruauté extrême et chargé de péché—moi qui ai tué mon propre père sur le champ de bataille.»
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Even acts committed amid war can carry grave moral and ritual consequences; dharma requires acknowledging wrongdoing and seeking appropriate prāyaścitta through qualified spiritual authorities rather than denying guilt or justifying cruelty.
A remorseful speaker addresses brāhmaṇas, confessing that he has killed his father in battle and asking them to prescribe an immediate expiation, framing the moment as a crisis of conscience and dharmic accountability.