Go-dāna-phala-nirdeśa
Merit and Destinations from the Gift of Cows
धारणं सर्ववेदानां सर्वतीर्थावगाहनम् | सत्यं च ब्रुवतो नित्यं सम॑ वा स्यान्न वा समम्
dhāraṇaṁ sarvavedānāṁ sarvatīrthāvagāhanam | satyaṁ ca bruvato nityaṁ samaṁ vā syān na vā samam ||
Bhishma said: “To have mastered and retained all the Vedas, and to have bathed in every sacred ford—whether the merit of such acts can truly equal the merit of a person who speaks truth constantly is itself doubtful. The implication is clear: steadfast truthfulness surpasses even these celebrated religious accomplishments.”
भीष्म उवाच
Constant truthfulness (satya) is presented as a higher and more reliable source of merit than even vast scriptural learning (retaining all the Vedas) or extensive pilgrimage (bathing at all tīrthas).
In the Anushasana Parva’s instruction on dharma, Bhishma is teaching ethical priorities: he contrasts prestigious religious acts with the inner moral discipline of always speaking truth, concluding that truth is superior.