उपदेशदोषप्रसङ्गः (Upadeśa-doṣa-prasaṅgaḥ) — The Risk of Misapplied Counsel
राजन! इसीलिये ऋषि-मुनि मौनभावसे ही आदसरपूर्वक दीक्षा देते हैं। कोई अनुचित बात मुँहसे न निकल जाय, इसीके भयसे वे कोई भाषण नहीं देते हैं ।।
dhārmikā guṇasampannāḥ satyārjavasamanvitāḥ | duruktavācābhihitaiḥ prāpnuvantīha duṣkṛtam ||
Bhishma said: Even men who are righteous, endowed with virtues, and possessed of truthfulness and straightforwardness become liable here to demerit when they utter improper, scripture-opposed words. Therefore sages, out of reverence and caution, often confer initiation in silence—fearing that an unfit statement might slip from the mouth.
भीष्म उवाच
Right speech is a crucial part of dharma: even virtuous people incur demerit if they speak improper, unscriptural, or harmful words; hence the wise practice restraint and sometimes teach or initiate in silence to avoid verbal fault.
Bhishma, instructing the king (Yudhishthira) in the Anushasana Parva, explains why sages value silence and caution in instruction: fear of uttering an inappropriate statement, which can generate moral fault even for the righteous.