Cyavana’s Yogic Display and Kuśika’s Recognition of Tapas (च्यवन-योगप्रभावः कुशिकस्य तपःप्रशंसा च)
च्यवन उवाच सहस्रन॑ नाहमहामि किं वा त्वं मन््यसे नृप । सदृशं दीयतां मूल्यं स्वबुद्ध्या निश्चयं कुरु
Cyavana uvāca: sahasreṇa nāham ahāmi kiṁ vā tvaṁ manyase nṛpa | sadṛśaṁ dīyatāṁ mūlyaṁ svabuddhyā niścayaṁ kuru ||
قال تشْيَوَنَة: «يا مَلِكَ الناس، لستُ ممّن يُشترى بألفٍ فحسب. أترى أن قدري لا يزيد على ذلك؟ أعطِ ثمناً يليق بي؛ وتدبّر بعقلك أنت، ثم احسم ما ينبغي أن يكون.»
च्यवन उवाच
Worth and recompense should be proportionate and guided by dharma: one should not reduce a person—especially a venerable sage—to a trivial monetary valuation. The king is urged to use independent judgment (svabuddhi) to determine what is truly appropriate (sadṛśa).
Cyavana addresses a king who appears to be offering (or proposing) a fixed payment of a thousand coins. Cyavana rejects that as inadequate and instructs the king to decide, through his own discernment, a fitting value—framing the issue as one of propriety and ethical judgment rather than mere transaction.