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Shloka 70

गदायुद्धप्रतिज्ञा — The Vow and Terms of the Mace Duel

जीवयेयमहं काम॑ न तु त्वं जीवितुं क्षम: । दुर्मते! इस समय तुम्हारा जीवन मेरे हाथपमें है। मैं इच्छानुसार तुम्हें जीवनदान दे सकता हूँ; परंतु तुम स्वेच्छापूर्वक जीवित रहनेमें समर्थ नहीं हो || ६९ ई ।।

yudhiṣṭhira uvāca | jīveyam ahaṃ kāmaṃ na tu tvaṃ jīvituṃ kṣamaḥ | durmate! idānīṃ tava jīvitaṃ mama hastagataṃ; aham icchānusāreṇa tvāṃ jīvadānaṃ dātuṃ śaknomi, na tu tvaṃ svacchandayā jīvituṃ samarthaḥ | dahane hi kṛto yatnas tvayāsmāsu viśeṣataḥ ||

尤提士提罗说道:“我若愿意,便可活;而你却无力存活。噫,心怀恶念者!此刻你的性命尽在我手。若我愿意,我可赐你生路;但你不能凭自身意志保全性命。因为你确曾蓄意用力——尤其针对我们——图谋使我们覆灭。”

{'jīveyam''I may live
{'jīveyam':
I could remain alive', 'ahaṃ''I', 'kāmaṃ': 'as I wish
I could remain alive', 'ahaṃ':
if I desire', 'na tu''but not
if I desire', 'na tu':
however not', 'tvaṃ''you', 'jīvituṃ': 'to live', 'kṣamaḥ': 'able
however not', 'tvaṃ':
competent', 'durmate''O wicked-minded one
competent', 'durmate':
O fool of evil intent', 'idānīm''now
O fool of evil intent', 'idānīm':
at this moment', 'jīvitam''life', 'mama': 'my', 'hasta-gatam': 'come into (my) hand
at this moment', 'jīvitam':
under (my) control', 'icchā-anusāreṇa''according to (my) wish
under (my) control', 'icchā-anusāreṇa':
as I choose', 'jīva-dānam''gift of life
as I choose', 'jīva-dānam':
sparing someone', 'dātuṃ śaknomi''I am able to give', 'svacchandayā': 'by one’s own will
sparing someone', 'dātuṃ śaknomi':
independently', 'samarthaḥ''capable
independently', 'samarthaḥ':
able', 'dahane''in burning
able', 'dahane':
in causing destruction (lit. burning)', 'hi''indeed
in causing destruction (lit. burning)', 'hi':
for', 'kṛtaḥ''done
for', 'kṛtaḥ':
made', 'yatnaḥ''effort
made', 'yatnaḥ':
attempt', 'tvayā''by you', 'asmāsu': 'against us
attempt', 'tvayā':
toward us', 'viśeṣataḥ''especially
toward us', 'viśeṣataḥ':

युधिछिर उवाच

Y
Yudhiṣṭhira

Educational Q&A

The verse contrasts true agency with helplessness: moral and martial power can place an opponent’s life under one’s control, yet dharma demands awareness of responsibility. Yudhiṣṭhira frames sparing or killing not as the enemy’s choice but as the victor’s ethical burden, while also recalling the enemy’s prior intent to destroy.

In the Shalya Parva battle context, Yudhiṣṭhira addresses an adversary he has overpowered, declaring that the opponent’s survival depends on Yudhiṣṭhira’s decision. He emphasizes that the foe had earlier made special efforts to bring ruin upon the Pāṇḍavas, thereby justifying stern judgment even while acknowledging the possibility of granting life.