Ārjava, Satya, and the Virocana–Sudhanvan Exemplum
Udyoga-parva 35
चरन्तं हंसरूपेण महर्षि संशितव्रतम् । साध्या देवा महाप्राज्ञं पर्यपृच्छन्त वै पुरा
carantaṃ haṃsarūpeṇa maharṣiṃ saṃśitavratam | sādhya devā mahāprājñaṃ paryapṛcchanta vai purā ||
In uralter Zeit wanderte der große Weise—standhaft in seinen asketischen Gelübden—in der Gestalt eines haṃsa (Sinnbild des „paramahaṃsa“). In jener frühen Epoche traten die Sādhya-Götter an den höchstweisen heran und befragten ihn, um Führung zu rechtem Wandel und zur höchsten Wahrheit zu erlangen.
विदुर उवाच
The verse frames dharma as something approached through humble inquiry: even divine beings seek instruction from a sage who embodies disciplined vows and higher discernment, suggesting that ethical clarity arises from wisdom, restraint, and asking the right questions.
Vidura introduces an ancient episode: a great sage, moving about in the symbolic haṃsa/paramahaṃsa form, is approached by the Sādhya gods, who question him—setting up a didactic dialogue meant to illuminate right conduct and higher truth.