विलापो भग्नसक्थस्य यो मे राज्ञ: परिश्रुत: । वार्तिकाणां कथयतां स मे मर्माणि कृन्तति,टूटी जाँघोंवाले राजा दुर्योधनका जो विलाप मैंने सुना है और संदेशवाहक दूतोंके मुखसे जो समाचार मुझे ज्ञात हुआ है, वह सब मेरे मर्मस्थानोंको विदीर्ण किये देता है
vilāpo bhagnasakthasya yo me rājñaḥ pariśrutaḥ | vārtikānāṃ kathayatāṃ sa me marmāṇi kṛntati ||
砕けた腿を負う王の嘆きとして私が聞いたもの、また使者たちが報せを語って伝えたその言葉――それらはことごとく、我が急所を断ち割るように胸腑をえぐる。
कृप उवाच
The verse highlights how the consequences of violent, unrighteous conflict do not end with physical defeat; they continue as inner torment. Hearing the fallen leader’s lament and the messengers’ reports becomes a moral and emotional wound, underscoring the lasting suffering produced by war and adharma.
Kṛpa speaks after the great battle, recalling Duryodhana—crippled with broken thighs—and describing how the king’s lament, along with the news repeated by messengers, painfully pierces his heart. It sets a tone of grief and agitation in the aftermath of the Kaurava collapse.