Ulūpī–Citravāhinī Saṃvāda: Dhanaṃjaya-patana and Prāya-threat
शोकसंतप्तहृदया रुदती वेपती भृशम् | मणिपूरपतेर्माता ददर्श निहतं पतिम्,मणिपुर-नरेशकी माताका हृदय शोकसे संतप्त हो उठा था! रोती और काँपती हुई चित्रांगदाने देखा कि पतिदेव मारे गये
śokasantaptahṛdayā rudatī vepatī bhṛśam | maṇipūrapater mātā dadarśa nihataṃ patim ||
Sinabi ni Vaiśampāyana: Nasusunog sa dalamhati ang kanyang puso; umiiyak siya at nanginginig nang matindi. Ang ina ng panginoon ng Maṇipura ay nakita ang kanyang asawa na nakahandusay na patay.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical aftermath of violence: even when conflict is framed by duty or politics, its most immediate truth is suffering borne by families—grief, fear, and the destabilization of social bonds.
A woman identified as the mother of the ruler of Maṇipura, overwhelmed by sorrow, weeps and trembles as she sees her husband lying dead, marking a moment of intense lamentation within the Ashvamedhika narrative.