Adhyāya 123 — Droṇa’s Pedagogy: Arjuna’s Preeminence, Ekalavya’s Self-Training, and the Bhāsa-Lakṣya Trial
त॑ तोषयित्वा तपसा पुत्र लप्स्ये महाबलम् । यं दास्यति स मे पुत्र॑ं स वरीयान् भविष्यति
taṁ toṣayitvā tapasā putra lapsye mahābalam | yaṁ dāsyati sa me putraṁ sa varīyān bhaviṣyati |
Vaiśampāyana said: “By austerity I shall please him and obtain a son of great might. The son he grants me will be my son indeed, and he will prove the best—supreme in strength and valor.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Focused austerity (tapas) directed toward a worthy divine ideal is presented as a means to attain extraordinary results; the verse also reflects the ethical tension of seeking power—strength is desired, but it is framed as a boon gained through disciplined self-control rather than mere force.
The speaker reports a resolve: to satisfy the deity through austerities and thereby obtain a son of exceptional might, who will be superior among men—setting up the motif of divinely granted offspring central to the epic’s dynastic story.