Book 10, Adhyāya 12: Aśvatthāmā’s Request for the Cakra and the Brahmaśiras Context
ततस्तदा कुरुश्रेष्ठ वनस्थे त्वयि भारत । अवसद् द्वारकामेत्य वृष्णिश्रि: परमार्चित:
tatastadā kuruśreṣṭha vanasthe tvayi bhārata | avasad dvārakām etya vṛṣṇiśrīḥ paramārcitaḥ ||
Wika ni Vaiśampāyana: “Pagkaraan niyon, O pinakamainam sa mga Kuru, O Bhārata—habang ikaw ay naninirahan sa gubat—ang kaluwalhatian ng angkang Vṛṣṇi, na lubhang pinararangalan, ay dumating sa Dvārakā at napasailalim sa paghina.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Even the most celebrated and honored prosperity of a powerful clan is not permanent; when conditions shift—often under the pressure of time and consequences—glory can quickly turn into decline, urging humility and vigilance in dharma.
The narrator marks a transition: while the addressed Bhārata figure is living in the forest, the narrative reports that the Vṛṣṇis’ famed prosperity, centered in Dvārakā, reaches a turning point and begins to collapse—foreshadowing the later destruction of the Yādava/Vṛṣṇi community.