Bhīmasena’s Counsel on Grief, Inner Conflict, and the Duty of Kingship (भीमसेन-उपदेशः)
तस्मिन्ननिर्जिति युद्धे प्राणान् यदि विमोक्ष्यसे । अन्यं देहं समास्थाय ततस्तैरपि योत्स्यसे
tasminn anirjiti yuddhe prāṇān yadi vimokṣyase | anyaṃ dehaṃ samāsthāya tatas tair api yotsyase ||
若在那尚未得胜的战斗中,你未先取胜便舍弃性命,那么当你再取另一具身躯时,仍将被迫与那些同样的敌人再战。
वैशम्पायन उवाच
One should not abandon one’s rightful duty out of fear or despair; failing to complete a necessary moral task does not erase its consequence, and the unresolved obligation returns—symbolized here by rebirth and renewed conflict.
Vaiśampāyana states a warning within the war-and-duty discourse: if a warrior relinquishes life without achieving victory in the appointed battle, he will take another body and still have to confront the same enemies—underscoring the inescapability of dharma and karmic continuity.