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Shloka 15

राजधर्मस्य नवनीतम्—रक्षा, दण्ड, चार, उत्थान

Rājadharma’s ‘Essence’: Protection, Punishment, Intelligence, and Royal Diligence

उत्थानवीर: पुरुषो वाग्वीरानधितिष्ठति । उत्थानवीरान्‌ वाग्वीरा रमयन्त उपासते

utthānavīraḥ puruṣo vāgvīrān adhitiṣṭhati | utthānavīrān vāgvīrā ramayanta upāsate ||

Bhishma teaches that a man who is heroic in exertion and enterprise naturally comes to hold sway over those who are merely heroic in speech. The eloquent and learned, though powerful with words, end up pleasing and serving the truly industrious—because effective action, not talk alone, becomes the basis of authority and leadership.

उत्थानवीरःone who is heroic in exertion/enterprise
उत्थानवीरः:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootउत्थानवीर
FormMasculine, Nominative, Singular
पुरुषःman, person
पुरुषः:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootपुरुष
FormMasculine, Nominative, Singular
वाग्वीरान्heroes in speech; eloquent men
वाग्वीरान्:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootवाग्वीर
FormMasculine, Accusative, Plural
अधितिष्ठतिrules over, dominates, presides over
अधितिष्ठति:
TypeVerb
Rootअधि-स्था
FormPresent, Third, Singular, Parasmaipada
उत्थानवीरान्men heroic in exertion/enterprise
उत्थानवीरान्:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootउत्थानवीर
FormMasculine, Accusative, Plural
वाग्वीराःeloquent men; heroes in speech
वाग्वीराः:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootवाग्वीर
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural
रमयन्तःpleasing, delighting
रमयन्तः:
TypeVerb
Rootरमयत्
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural, शतृ (present active participle), Active
उपासतेserve, attend upon, worship
उपासते:
TypeVerb
Rootउप-आस्
FormPresent, Third, Plural, Atmanepada

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma (speaker)
U
utthānavīra (the industrious/enterprising man)
V
vāgvīra (the eloquent/word-hero)

Educational Q&A

Bhishma emphasizes that real authority arises from energetic effort and effective action (utthāna). Mere eloquence and learning, when not matched by enterprise, tend to become subordinate—serving and pleasing those who actually accomplish things.

In Bhishma’s instruction to Yudhishthira in the Shanti Parva, he contrasts two types of excellence: prowess in action (utthānavīra) and prowess in speech (vāgvīra). He states that the industrious person naturally gains dominance, while the eloquent often seek the favor of the doer by entertaining and praising him.