मृदु-तीक्ष्ण-नीति तथा दुष्टलक्षण-विज्ञानम्
Measured Policy and the Recognition of Malicious Disposition
ब॒हस्पतिरुवाच परोक्षमगुणानाह सदगुणानभ्यसूयते । परैर्वा कीर्त्यमानेषु तृष्णीमास्ते पराड्मुख:
bṛhaspatir uvāca parokṣam aguṇān āha sadguṇān abhyasūyate | parair vā kīrtyamāneṣu tṛṣṇīm āste parāṅmukhaḥ ||
বৃহস্পতি বললেন—দেবরাজ! যে ব্যক্তি কারও অগোচরে কেবল দোষই বলে, তার সত্য গুণেও দোষ খোঁজে, আর অন্যেরা যখন সেই গুণের প্রশংসা করে তখন মুখ ফিরিয়ে নীরব থাকে—সেই-ই দুষ্ট বলে গণ্য।
भीष्म उवाच
A person’s moral corruption is shown by three signs: speaking of others’ faults in their absence, fault-finding even with genuine virtues, and refusing to acknowledge goodness when others praise it—silence and turning away here indicate envy and hostility to virtue.
Within Bhīṣma’s discourse in Śānti Parva, a saying attributed to Bṛhaspati is cited as an ethical maxim, defining the behavior by which a ‘duṣṭa’ (wicked person) can be recognized—especially through how they speak about others’ qualities.