भविष्यति हते कर्णे मयि चापि जयाधिके । “माधव! आज कर्णके मारे जाने और विजयके कारण मेरी प्रतिष्ठा बढ़ जानेपर न जाने शिनिपौत्र सात्यकिको कितनी प्रसन्नता होगी?
bhaviṣyati hate karṇe mayi cāpi jayādhike | “mādhava! āja karṇake māre jāne aura vijayake kāraṇa merī pratiṣṭhā baṛh jānepara na jāne śinipautra sātyakiko kitanī prasannatā hogī?"
三阇耶说道:“哦摩陀婆!当迦尔那被杀,而我也因胜利而声望大增之时——谁能说得清,今日尸尼之子萨底耶吉将欢喜到何等地步?”
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how victory and the fall of a formidable opponent can inflate reputation and provoke partisan joy, pointing to the ethical tension between righteous duty in war and the human tendency toward pride and schadenfreude.
Sañjaya, narrating events to Dhṛtarāṣṭra, remarks that with Karṇa’s impending/assumed death and the consequent rise in the speaker’s prestige due to victory, Sātyaki—an ally of the Pāṇḍavas—would be especially delighted.