Pānīya-dāna and Anna-dāna: The Primacy of Life-Sustaining Gifts (पानीयदान-प्रशंसा / अन्नदान-प्रशंसा)
भीष्म उवाच नारदेनैवमुक्तो5हमदामन्नं सदा नृप । अनसूयुस्त्वमप्यन्नं तस्माद् देहि गतज्वर:
bhīṣma uvāca nāradenaivam ukto ’ham adām annaṃ sadā nṛpa | anasūyus tvam apy annaṃ tasmād dehi gata-jvaraḥ ||
Bhishma said: “O king, when Narada instructed me in this way about the greatness of giving food, from that time onward I have always given food in charity. Therefore you too, free from envy and fault-finding, give food; let your fever of distress be gone.”
भीष्म उवाच
Food-giving (anna-dāna) is upheld as a powerful dharmic act; one should give without envy or fault-finding, and such generosity alleviates inner ‘fever’—distress and agitation.
Bhishma recalls that Narada taught him the greatness of donating food; he adopted the practice continually and now urges the king to do the same, abandoning jealousy and negativity.