बिभेमि न तथा मृत्योर्यथा बिभ्येडनृतादहम् । विशेषेण द्विजातीनां सर्वेषां सर्वदा सताम्
bibhemi na tathā mṛtyor yathā bibhyed anṛtād aham | viśeṣeṇa dvijātīnāṃ sarveṣāṃ sarvadā satām ||
Wika ni Karna: “Hindi ko kinatatakutan ang kamatayan gaya ng pagkakatakot ko sa kasinungalingan. Higit sa lahat, labis akong natatakot magsalita ng di-totoo sa harap ng mga dwija—ang mga ‘dalawang ulit isinilang’—na laging matuwid.”
कर्ण उवाच
Truthfulness (satya) is presented as a higher ethical fear than physical death: a noble person should dread moral downfall—especially lying before the righteous—more than bodily destruction.
In Vana Parva, Karna speaks about his inner code of conduct, declaring that the shame and sin of untruth—particularly in the presence of virtuous twice-born elders—terrifies him more than the prospect of dying.