स्त्री-विलापः — गान्धार्याः रणभूमिदर्शनं शापवचनं च
Battlefield Lament and Gāndhārī’s Curse
पतिशुश्रूषया यन्मे तप: किंचिदुपार्जितम् | तेन त्वां दुरवापेन शप्स्ये चक्रगदाधर,चक्र और गदा धारण करनेवाले केशव! मैंने पतिकी सेवासे जो कुछ भी तप प्राप्त किया है, उस दुर्लभ तपोबलसे तुम्हें शाप दे रही हूँ
patiśuśrūṣayā yan me tapaḥ kiñcid upārjitam | tena tvāṃ duravāpena śapsye cakragadādhara ||
വൈശമ്പായനൻ പറഞ്ഞു— ഹേ ചക്രഗദാധരനായ കേശവാ! ഭർത്തൃസേവനത്തിലൂടെ ഞാൻ സമ്പാദിച്ച അല്പമായ തപസ്സു—ആ ദുർലഭ തപോബലത്താൽ ഞാൻ നിന്നെ ശപിക്കുന്നു.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the moral force attributed to tapas earned through disciplined, faithful conduct—here, wifely devotion—showing that ethical and ascetic merit is believed to carry real potency, even to the extent of authorizing a curse against a powerful figure when one feels grievously wronged.
In the Stree Parva’s post-war setting of grief and accusation, a woman invokes the spiritual merit she has gained through service to her husband and directs it as a curse toward Kṛṣṇa (Keśava), addressed by his epithet ‘bearer of discus and mace,’ expressing outrage at the catastrophic outcome of the war.