Vyāsa’s Inquiry into Dhṛtarāṣṭra’s Tapas and the Identification of Vidura with Dharma
जनन्या समुपाघ्राता: परिष्वक्ताश्न ते नृपम् । चक्कुः प्रदक्षिणं सर्वे वत्सा इव निवारणे
jananyā samupāghrātāḥ pariṣvaktāś ca te nṛpam | cakṣuḥ pradakṣiṇaṃ sarve vatsā iva nivāraṇe ||
Yudhiṣṭhira said: “Those women drew near, lovingly smelled their mother’s head and embraced her; then all turned their eyes toward you in reverence, O king—like calves circling their mother in the cattle-pen.”
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse highlights dharmic tenderness and social ethics: affection and reverence are expressed through intimate gestures (smelling, embracing) and respectful attention toward rightful authority, portraying care, humility, and relational duty as virtues.
Yudhiṣṭhira describes a scene where people—especially women—approach their mother figure with affection, embrace her, and then look respectfully toward the king, compared to calves gathering around their mother in an enclosure.