नृपतेर्भग्नसक्थस्य श्रुत्वा तादृगू वच: पुनः । “टूटी जाँघवाले राजा दुर्योधनकी वैसी बात पुनः सुनकर किस निष्ठुरके भी नेत्रोंसे आँसू नहीं बह चलेगा?
nṛpater bhagnasakthasya śrutvā tādṛg vacaḥ punaḥ |
ತೊಡೆಗಳು ಮುರಿದ ರಾಜ ದುರ್ಯೋಧನನ ಅಂಥ ಮಾತುಗಳನ್ನು ಮತ್ತೆ ಕೇಳಿದರೆ, ಎಷ್ಟೇ ಕಠೋರನಾದರೂ ಯಾರ ಕಣ್ಣುಗಳಿಂದಲೂ ಕಣ್ಣೀರು ಹರಿಯದೆ ಇರಬಹುದೇ?
कृप उवाच
Even in a battlefield narrative driven by vengeance, the Mahābhārata foregrounds compassion: suffering—especially the fallen enemy’s—can pierce hardness of heart and becomes an ethical mirror for the listener.
In the Sauptika Parva, after the catastrophic end of the war, Kṛpa recalls and reacts to Duryodhana’s words spoken while grievously wounded (his thighs smashed). Kṛpa emphasizes the emotional force of the fallen king’s speech, suggesting it would move anyone to tears.