The Thirteen Inner Adversaries (Trayodaśa Doṣāḥ): Origins and Pacification
अहं तु दुर्बलो<न्ये भ्यो वृक्षेभ्यो नात्र संशय: । कि तु बुद्धा समो नास्ति मया कश्चिद् वनस्पति:
ahaṃ tu durbalo 'nye bhyo vṛkṣebhyo nātra saṃśayaḥ | kintu buddhā samo nāsti mayā kaścid vanaspatiḥ |
মই আন গছবোৰতকৈও দুৰ্বল—ইয়াত কোনো সন্দেহ নাই; কিন্তু বুদ্ধিত মোৰ সমান কোনো বনস্পতি নাই।
भीष्म उवाच
The verse contrasts physical strength with बुद्धि (intelligence), implying that moral and practical excellence is grounded more in discernment than in brute power; humility about one’s limitations can coexist with confidence in one’s true virtue.
Bhīṣma, speaking in the didactic setting of the Śānti Parva, presents a self-characterization (in a tree-based comparison) that admits weakness in strength while asserting superiority in intelligence, reinforcing the parva’s emphasis on reflective ethics and right judgment.