संजय उवाच धर्मार्थसहितं वाक््यं श्रुत्वा हितमनामयम् | नारोचयत पुत्रस्ते मुमूर्षरिव भेषजम्
sañjaya uvāca dharmārthasahitaṃ vākyaṃ śrutvā hitamanāmayam | nārocayat putras te mumūrṣur iva bheṣajam ||
संजय बोले—राजन्! धर्म और अर्थ से युक्त, परम हितकर तथा निर्दोष भीष्म के उस वचन को सुनकर भी आपके पुत्र ने उसे स्वीकार नहीं किया; जैसे मरणासन्न पुरुष को औषधि भी रुचिकर नहीं लगती।
संजय उवाच
Even flawless, welfare-oriented counsel rooted in dharma and sound policy can be rejected by a person dominated by stubbornness and impending self-destruction; moral truth does not automatically persuade a mind unwilling to be healed.
Sanjaya reports to King Dhritarashtra that Bhishma offered a blameless and beneficial admonition, but Dhritarashtra’s son (Duryodhana) disliked it—likened to a dying man who cannot accept medicine—signaling Duryodhana’s resistance to corrective guidance as war approaches.