Yudhiṣṭhira’s Remorse and Vyāsa’s Teaching on Impermanence (Śoka-nivāraṇa)
कॉल्लोकांस्तु गमिष्यामि कृत्वा कर्म सुदुष्करम् | अघातयं च यत् कर्ण समरेष्वपलायिनम्
kāllokāṁstu gamiṣyāmi kṛtvā karma suduṣkaram | aghātayaṁ ca yat karṇa samareṣvapalāyinam ||
ユディシュティラは言った。「私は死の諸世界へ赴くであろう。最も困難で、しかも痛ましい業をなしたのだから——戦場から決して退かなかったカルナを、戦の中で討たせたのはこの私なのだ。」
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse highlights moral accountability after violence: even when war is fought under kṣatriya-duty, the mind may still confront remorse for causing the death of a noble, steadfast opponent. It frames ethical reflection as inseparable from action and its consequences.
In Śānti Parva, Yudhiṣṭhira laments the outcomes of the war. Here he confesses that he feels destined for the realms of Death because he was a cause in Karṇa’s killing—praising Karṇa’s unwavering bravery (‘one who did not flee in battle’) while expressing personal guilt.