चतुर्मूर्तिश्नतुर्बाह श्वत॒र्व्यूहश्चतुर्गति: । चतुरात्मा चतुर्भावश्चतुर्वेदविदेकपात्
caturmūrtiś caturbāhuḥ śvatarvyūhaś caturgatiḥ | caturātmā caturbhāvaś caturvedavidekapāt ||
Bhīṣma said: He is of four forms, four-armed, and endowed with the fourfold divine emanations; his supreme goal is fourfold. He possesses the fourfold inner self, is the source of the four human aims, knows the purport of the four Vedas, and—though one-footed—pervades the entire universe by a single portion of himself.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse praises the Supreme as simultaneously manifold and one: manifesting in four forms and four emanations, granting four modes of liberation, grounding the four aims of human life, and yet pervading the cosmos by a single portion—teaching divine completeness, accessibility through devotion, and the integration of worldly aims with ultimate liberation.
In Anuśāsana Parva, Bhīṣma continues his instruction and eulogy of the Supreme (a hymn-like passage), enumerating divine attributes in compact epithets to convey the deity’s cosmic sovereignty and salvific power.