Kṣemadarśa–Kālakavṛkṣīya Saṃvāda: Counsel on Impermanence, Non-attachment, and Composure in Dispossession
इमामवस्थां सम्प्राप्तं दीनमार्त श्रिया च्युतम् । यदन्यत् सुखमस्तीह तद् ब्रह्मन्ननुशाधि माम्
imām avasthāṁ samprāptaṁ dīnam ārtaṁ śriyā cyutam | yad anyat sukham astīha tad brahmann anuśādhi mām ||
হে ব্ৰাহ্মণ! ৰাজ্যলক্ষ্মীৰ পৰা চ্যুত হৈ, দীন আৰু আৰ্ত হৈ মই এই কৰুণ অৱস্থালৈ পৰি আহিছোঁ। এই জগতত ধনৰ বাহিৰে যি সুখ আছে, সেই বিষয়ে মোক উপদেশ দিয়ক।
भीष्म उवाच
The verse frames an ethical inquiry: when prosperity and status collapse, one must ask what enduring happiness remains beyond wealth. It sets up instruction on inner goods—dharma, self-control, contentment, and spiritual insight—as sources of well-being not dependent on external fortune.
Bhishma, speaking to a Brahmin teacher, describes his fallen, distressed condition—stripped of royal prosperity—and requests guidance about any happiness available in the world apart from material wealth.