Mahāprasthānika-parva Adhyāya 2: The Northward March, Sight of Himavat and Meru, and the Sequential Falls
तांस्तु प्रपतितान् दृष्टवा पाण्डव: श्वेतवाहन: । पपात शोकसन्तप्तस्ततो नु परवीरहा
tāṁstu prapatitān dṛṣṭvā pāṇḍavaḥ śvetavāhanaḥ | papāta śokasantaptas tato nu paravīrahā ||
彼らが地に倒れ伏すのを見て、白き馬に車を牽かせ、敵の勇士を屠ってきたパーンダヴァのアルジュナは、悲嘆に呑まれ、憂いに灼かれて、彼もまた崩れ落ちた。
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights impermanence and the limits of worldly strength: even a celebrated warrior is undone by sorrow when confronted with loss. It points toward the Mahābhārata’s ethical movement from heroic action to detachment—accepting destiny and the inevitable dissolution of human bonds.
During the great departure (mahāprasthāna), Arjuna sees his companions already fallen. Struck by intense grief, he too collapses, marking another step in the sequential falling of the Pāṇḍavas on their final journey.