ब्राह्मणपूजा-राजधर्मः | Royal Duty of Honoring Learned Brahmins
हैहयस्य तु राजेन्द्र दशसु स्त्रीषु भारत । शतं बभूव पुत्राणां शूराणामनिवर्तिनाम्
haihayasya tu rājendra daśasu strīṣu bhārata | śataṃ babhūva putrāṇāṃ śūrāṇām anivartinām ||
Wika ni Bhishma: “O hari, O inapo ni Bharata, ang pinunong Haihaya ay may sampung asawa. Mula sa kanila ay isinilang ang sandaang anak na lalaki—mga bayani na hindi kailanman umurong sa labanan.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights the ideal of kṣatriya steadfastness—warriors are praised as anivartin, those who do not retreat—while also situating this ideal within dynastic and genealogical narration.
Bhishma recounts a genealogical detail: the Haihaya ruler, having ten wives, fathers a hundred sons described as brave and unwavering in battle, emphasizing the martial character of that line.