Cyavana’s Yogic Display and Kuśika’s Recognition of Tapas (च्यवन-योगप्रभावः कुशिकस्य तपःप्रशंसा च)
(ब्राह्मणानां गवां चैव कुलमेकं द्विधा कृतम् । एकत्र मन्त्रास्तिष्ठन्ति हविरन्यत्र तिष्ठतति ।।
bhīṣma uvāca |
brāhmaṇānāṃ gavāṃ caiva kulam ekaṃ dvidhā kṛtam |
ekatra mantrās tiṣṭhanti havir anyatra tiṣṭhati ||
anarghyā mahārāja dvijā varṇeṣu cottamāḥ |
gāvaś ca puruṣavyāghra gaur mūlyaṃ parikalpyatām ||
Bhishma said: “O King, the lineage of Brahmins and of cows is one, though it appears divided into two forms: in one place reside the sacred mantras, and in the other resides the oblation (havis) itself. O great king, the twice-born are priceless and the foremost among the social orders. And cows too, O tiger among men, are beyond valuation. Therefore, let a cow be assigned as their ‘price’—not as a true measure of worth, but as the fitting token of honor in giving.”
भीष्म उवाच
Brahmins and cows are presented as intrinsically sacred and ‘priceless’: Brahmins embody the Vedic mantras, while cows embody the sacrificial offering (havis). Since their worth cannot be truly measured, any ‘price’ is only a symbolic honor—hence the stipulation of giving a cow as an appropriate token in acts of giving and reverence.
Bhishma is instructing the king on dharma related to honoring Brahmins and cows. He frames them as two manifestations of a single sacred lineage—mantra and oblation—then advises that, though beyond valuation, a cow may be fixed as the conventional token of value in the context of gifts and ritual propriety.