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Shloka 276

कृपोपदेशः — द्रौणेरनिद्रा च

Kṛpa’s Counsel and Drauṇi’s Sleepless Resolve

स पुनर्हदयं कस्य क्रूरस्यापि न निर्दहेत्‌ । *धृष्टद्युम्न तो पिताजीका वध करनेके कारण मेरा वध्य होगा और उसके संगी-साथी जो पांचाल हैं

sa punar hṛdayaṁ kasya krūrasyāpi na nirdahēt |

Dan lagi, hati siapa—sekejam apa pun dia—yang tidak akan tersengat pedih oleh ini? Dhrishtadyumna akan kubunuh karena ia membunuh ayahku; dan para Pañcāla, para pengikutnya, juga akan dibinasakan karena berdiri di pihaknya. Dan ratapan Raja Duryodhana—yang pahanya telah dihancurkan—yang kudengar dengan telingaku sendiri: manusia berhati keras mana yang tidak akan terbakar oleh duka saat mendengarnya?

{'saḥ''he
{'saḥ':
that (person/thing)', 'punar''again
that (person/thing)', 'punar':
moreover', 'hṛdayam''heart
moreover', 'hṛdayam':
inner mind', 'kasya''of whom? whose?', 'krūrasya': 'of a cruel/harsh person', 'api': 'even
inner mind', 'kasya':
also', 'na''not', 'nirdahēt': 'would burn
also', 'na':
would scorch (figurativelywith grief)'}
would scorch (figuratively:

कृप उवाच

K
Kṛpa
D
Dhṛṣṭadyumna
P
Pañcālas
D
Duryodhana

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights how extreme suffering and the hearing of a fallen king’s lament can melt even a hardened heart, while also showing how grief can fuel vows of retribution—raising ethical tension between compassion and vengeance in the aftermath of war.

In the Sauptika Parva’s aftermath of the great battle, Kṛpa recalls Duryodhana’s grievous condition and lament, and he frames the coming violence against Dhṛṣṭadyumna and the Pañcālas as retaliatory punishment for the killing of his father (Droṇa).