ततो दारूणि चाहृत्य चितिं कृत्वा नराधिप । आरुरोहाग्निसंदीप्तां चितिं सा पतिदुःखिता । तावदाकाशगां वाणीं शुश्राव च यशस्विनी
tato dārūṇi cāhṛtya citiṃ kṛtvā narādhipa | ārurohāgnisaṃdīptāṃ citiṃ sā patiduḥkhitā | tāvadākāśagāṃ vāṇīṃ śuśrāva ca yaśasvinī
Alors, ô seigneur des hommes, ayant apporté du bois et dressé le bûcher, elle—tourmentée par la douleur pour son époux—monta sur le bûcher embrasé. À cet instant, la dame illustre entendit une voix venue du ciel.
Sūta (deduced: Prabhāsakhaṇḍa narrative style)
Listener: narādhipa (king addressed)
Scene: A grieving woman gathers logs and mounts a blazing funeral pyre; flames rise as an unseen celestial voice is about to intervene from the sky.
Grief can drive extreme acts, yet divine guidance (ākāśa-vāṇī) can intervene to redirect fate toward dharma.
No tīrtha is highlighted in this verse; it continues the aftermath narrative following the Arbuda episode.
A funeral pyre (citi) is described as an action in grief, not as a prescribed rite for the audience.