Ārjava, Satya, and the Virocana–Sudhanvan Exemplum
Udyoga-parva 35
ऑपन-माज बछ। अफि्-"ऋा - यज्ञोपवीतहीन पिताका पुत्र
vidura uvāca | atraivodāharantīmam itihāsaṁ purātanam | ātreyasya ca saṁvādaṁ sādhyānāṁ ceti naḥ śrutam ||
বিদুৰে ক’লে—হে ৰাজন! এই বিষয়তেই লোকে এটা প্ৰাচীন ইতিহাসৰ দৃষ্টান্ত দিয়ে—দত্তাত্ৰেয় (আত্রেয়) আৰু সাধ্যদেৱতাসকলৰ সংলাপ। সেয়া আমিো পৰম্পৰাৰে শুনিছোঁ।
विदुर उवाच
Vidura frames his ethical counsel by appealing to authoritative tradition: he will support his argument with an ancient exemplary narrative (itihāsa), implying that dharma is clarified through time-tested precedents and the testimony of the wise.
Vidura begins a new section of instruction to King Dhṛtarāṣṭra by introducing a well-known old story—described as a dialogue between Dattātreya (Ātreya) and the Sādhya gods—which he says is part of what has been heard in tradition.