Kṛṣṇasya Karṇam Prati Sāntvavacana
Kṛṣṇa’s Conciliatory Address to Karṇa
दत्त हुतमधीतं च ब्राह्मणास्तर्पिता धनै: । आवयोर्गतमायुश्न॒ कृतकृत्यौ च विद्धि नौ
dattaṁ hutam adhītaṁ ca brāhmaṇās tarpītā dhanaiḥ | āvayor gatam āyuḥna kṛtakṛtyau ca viddhi nau ||
Wika ni Bhīṣma: “Nagawa na namin ang dapat gawin—nakapagkaloob na ng mga handog, nakapaghain na ng mga sakripisyo, at nagsagawa na ng banal na pag-aaral. Sa aming yaman ay napasiyahan namin ang mga brāhmaṇa. Ngayon, ang itinakdang haba ng aming buhay ay nagwakas na; kaya’t ituring mo kaming ganap na sa tungkulin, na wala nang mahalagang naiwan na hindi nagawa.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse presents a classical dharmic ideal: a life is considered complete when one has upheld the three pillars of righteous living—charity (dāna), sacrificial duty (yajña/homa), and sacred study (svādhyāya)—and has honored the learned (brāhmaṇas). With life nearing its end, one should be regarded as kṛtakṛtya, having discharged essential obligations.
Bhīṣma speaks in the Udyoga Parva context of counsel and preparation before the great war. He characterizes himself (and another, implied by the dual forms) as having completed the principal religious and social duties of life, indicating that their remaining time is short and that they stand as duty-fulfilled elders whose counsel should be heeded.