द्वादशः सर्गः — Kaikeyi’s Boons and Dasaratha’s Moral Collapse
Ayodhya Kanda 12
न जीवितं मेऽस्ति पुनःकुत स्सुखं विनाऽऽत्मजेनाऽत्मवतः कुतो रतिः।ममाहितं देवि न कर्तुमर्हसि स्पृशामि पादावपि ते प्रसीद मे।।।।
na jīvitaṃ me ’sti punaḥ kutaḥ sukhaṃ vinā ’tmajenā ’tmavataḥ kuto ratiḥ |
mamāhitaṃ devi na kartum arhasi spṛśāmi pādāv api te prasīda me ||
ដោយគ្មានព្រះរាជបុត្រា ជីវិតរបស់ខ្ញុំក៏មិនមានទៀត—ហើយសុខសាន្តនឹងមានពីណា? សម្រាប់បុរសដែលរក្សាកិត្តិយសខ្លួន តើរីករាយនឹងកើតពីណា? ឱ ព្រះនាងមហេសីជាទេវី សូមកុំធ្វើអ្វីដែលប៉ះពាល់ដល់ខ្ញុំឡើយ; ខ្ញុំសូមប៉ះព្រះបាទរបស់ព្រះនាងផង—សូមមេត្តាខ្ញុំ។
There is no life for me without my son (Rama). What to speak of happiness again? Where is pleasure for a selfrespecting man like me? O queen, it does not behove you to do this harmful act. I will touch your feet. Show pity on me.
It frames compassion as dharma: even amid conflict, one should not commit ‘ahita’ (harm) against the vulnerable; the plea appeals to humane restraint and moral responsibility.
Daśaratha’s anger collapses into desperation; he begs Kaikeyī to relent, even offering the humiliating gesture of touching her feet.
Humility and supplication in crisis—Daśaratha abandons royal pride to seek mercy for what he sees as a dharmic necessity: keeping Rāma near.