उशनसः (शुक्रस्य) चरितम् — The Account of Uśanā (Śukra): Yoga, Grievance, and Pacification
निर्जितेनासहायेन हृतराज्येन भारत । अशोचता शत्रुमध्ये बुद्धिमास्थाय केवलाम्
bhīṣma uvāca | nirjitena asahāyena hṛtarājyena bhārata | aśocatā śatrumadhye buddhim āsthāya kevalām naraśvara | asmin viṣaye ekaḥ prācīna itihāsaḥ kathyate; taṃ ekacittaḥ śṛṇu | bharatanandana! pūrvakāle vṛtrāsuraḥ parājitaḥ aiśvarya-bhraṣṭaḥ abhavat | tasya kaścid api sahāyaḥ na avaśiṣṭaḥ | devaiḥ tasya rājyaṃ hṛtam | tādṛśyāṃ daśāyām api saḥ asuraḥ yathā ceṣṭitavān, tasyaiva asyāṃ kathāyāṃ varṇanam | saḥ śatrūṇāṃ madhye api āsaktiśūnya-buddhim āśritya śokaṃ na karoti |
ହେ ଭାରତ! ପରାଜିତ, ନିର୍ସହାୟ ଓ ରାଜ୍ୟହୃତ ହୋଇଥିଲେ ମଧ୍ୟ ସେ ଶୋକ କଲା ନାହିଁ; ଶତ୍ରୁମଧ୍ୟରେ ଥାଇ ମଧ୍ୟ ସେ କେବଳ ଶୁଦ୍ଧ, ଅନାସକ୍ତ ବୁଦ୍ଧିର ଆଶ୍ରୟ ନେଲା।
भीष्म उवाच
Even when one is defeated, abandoned, and dispossessed, grief is not inevitable: by taking refuge in pure, unattached discernment (kevalā buddhi) and relinquishing clinging (āsakti), one can remain steady amid enemies and adversity.
Bhishma introduces an ancient illustrative episode: Vṛtrāsura, after being defeated and stripped of his realm by the gods, stands among enemies without lamentation. The text sets up his conduct as a model for how to act when fortune and power collapse.