रणे विनिहतं श्रुत्वा शोकार्ता वै विनड्क्ष्यति । “मुझे बारंबार सुभद्राके लिये शोक हो रहा है, जो युद्धसे मुँह न मोड़नेवाले अपने वीर पुत्रको रणभूमिमें मारा गया सुनकर शोकसे आतुर हो प्राण त्याग देगी
raṇe vinihataṃ śrutvā śokārtā vai vinaṅkṣyati |
रणे विनिहतं श्रुत्वा तं वीरं न युद्धात् पराङ्मुखं, सुभद्रा शोकाकुला नूनं क्षीयते; प्राणानपि त्यजेत्॥
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights the human cost of war: even when a warrior fulfills kṣatriya-duty by not turning from battle, the aftermath falls heavily on loved ones. It implicitly raises an ethical tension between martial dharma and the suffering it causes within families.
Sañjaya foresees Subhadrā’s reaction upon hearing that her son has been killed in battle—predicting that grief will overwhelm her to the point of wasting away or even dying.