Pāṇḍu’s Marriages, Conquests, and Triumphal Return (पाण्डोर्विवाह-विजय-प्रत्यागमनम्)
वैशम्पायन उवाच महर्षे: कीर्तने तस्य भीष्म: प्राउजलिरब्रवीत् । धर्ममर्थ च काम॑ च त्रीनेतान् यो5नुपश्यति
vaiśampāyana uvāca | maharṣeḥ kīrtane tasya bhīṣmaḥ prāñjalir abravīt | dharmam arthaṃ ca kāmaṃ ca trīn etān yo'nupaśyati, uktaṃ bhavatyā yac chreyas tan mahān rocayate bhṛśam |
Vaiśampāyana said: When the great sage’s name was spoken, Bhīṣma, with hands joined in reverence, replied: “Mother, the one who repeatedly reflects upon these three—dharma, artha, and kāma—and discerns how each yields its proper fruit, what brings happiness in the end, and how indulgence can also produce contrary results, is truly wise. What you have said is in accord with dharma and is also beneficial and auspicious for our lineage; therefore it pleases me greatly.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
True wisdom lies in repeatedly weighing dharma, artha, and kāma—understanding their proper outcomes as well as the harmful, contrary results that can arise from misuse—and then deciding what is truly śreyas (beneficial) for oneself and one’s community.
As the narrator Vaiśampāyana reports, the mention of the great sage (Vyāsa) prompts Bhīṣma to respond with reverence (joined palms). He then endorses the counsel given by the addressed woman (“Mother”), praising it as dharmic and beneficial for the Kuru family.