तृतीयं गृह्यृतां पुत्र वरमप्रतिमं महत् । त्वं हि मत्प्रभवों राजन् विदुरश्चन ममांशज:,“बेटा! तुम तीसरा भी महान् एवं अनुपम वर माँग लो। राजन्! तुम मेरे पुत्र हो और विदुरने भी मेरे ही अंशसे जन्म लिया है”
tṛtīyaṃ gṛhṇīṣva putra varam apratimaṃ mahat | tvaṃ hi matprabhavo rājan viduraś ca na mama aṃśajaḥ ||
قال فايشَمبايانا: «يا بُنيّ، اختر نعمةً ثالثةً أيضًا—عظيمةً لا نظير لها. أيها الملك، إنك مولودٌ مني؛ وكذلك وِدورا وُلد من جزءٍ من كياني».
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse underscores ethical responsibility grounded in kinship and origin: the giver of boons frames the recipient as ‘my own’ and includes Vidura as an emanational offspring, implying that favors and duties should be guided by recognition of shared lineage and moral accountability.
A speaker (reported by Vaiśampāyana) urges a king addressed as ‘son’ to request a third, incomparable boon, while affirming a close relationship: the king is said to be born from the speaker, and Vidura is also described as born from the speaker’s own portion.