Śāṇḍilī–Suparṇa Saṃvāda
Conduct, Intention, and Restoration
तुल्यरूपाननान् मत्स्यांस्तथा तिमितिमिंगिलान | नागाश्वनरवक्त्रांश्व॒ पश्याम्युन्मथितानिव
tulyarūpānanān matsyāṁs tathā timitimiṅgilān | nāgāśvanaravaktrāṁś ca paśyāmy unmathitān iva ||
যাদের আকৃতি ও মুখ একরকম—এমন মাছ, তিমি ও তিমিঙ্গিল, আর হাতি, ঘোড়া ও মানুষের মতো মুখবিশিষ্ট জলজ প্রাণীদের আমি উন্মথিত, তোলপাড় হওয়া অবস্থায় দেখছি।
गालव उवाच
The verse conveys a moral-psychological warning: when the world’s order is disturbed, even nature appears agitated and monstrous. Such imagery functions as an ethical prompt to recognize impending adharma-driven upheaval and to seek restraint and right counsel before conflict escalates.
Gālava reports a fearful vision of the waters: fish and immense sea-creatures appear churned up, and strange aquatic beings seem to have mouths like elephants, horses, and humans. The description reads as a portent—an ominous sign of turbulence and approaching calamity in the broader Udyoga Parva context.