Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 4

अध्वर्यु–यति संवादः

Adhvaryu–Yati Dialogue on Svabhāva, Ahiṃsā, and Mokṣa

अकामयानस्य च सर्वकामा- नविद्विषाणस्य च सर्वदोषान्‌ | न मे स्वभावेषु भवन्ति लेपा- स्तोयस्य बिन्दोरिव पुष्करेषु,मैं सम्पूर्ण कामनाओंमेंसे किसीकी कामना नहीं करता। समस्त दोषोंसे भी कभी द्वेष नहीं करता। जैसे कमलके पत्तोंपर जल-बिन्दुका लेप नहीं होता, उसी प्रकार मेरे स्वभावमें राग और द्वेषका स्पर्श नहीं है

akāmāyanasya ca sarvakāmān avidviṣāṇasya ca sarvadoṣān | na me svabhāveṣu bhavanti lepās toyasya bindor iva puṣkareṣu ||

The Brahmin says: “I do not crave any of the objects of desire, and I bear no hatred even toward all faults. Just as a drop of water does not cling to a lotus leaf, so attachment and aversion do not adhere to my nature.”

{'akāmāyanasya''of one who does not desire
{'akāmāyanasya':
free from craving', 'sarva-kāmān''all desires
free from craving', 'sarva-kāmān':
all objects of enjoyment', 'avidviṣāṇasya''of one who does not hate
all objects of enjoyment', 'avidviṣāṇasya':
free from aversion', 'sarva-doṣān''all faults/defects
free from aversion', 'sarva-doṣān':
all vices', 'na me''not to me
all vices', 'na me':
in me not', 'svabhāveṣu''in (my) dispositions/nature
in me not', 'svabhāveṣu':
in innate tendencies', 'bhavanti''arise
in innate tendencies', 'bhavanti':
come to be', 'lepāḥ''stains
come to be', 'lepāḥ':
adhesion (figuratively, moral/mental taint)', 'toyasya''of water', 'bindoḥ': 'of a drop', 'iva': 'like
adhesion (figuratively, moral/mental taint)', 'toyasya':
as', 'puṣkareṣu''on lotus leaves (lit. in/among lotuses)'}
as', 'puṣkareṣu':

ब्राह्मण उवाच

ब्राह्मण (Brahmin speaker)
पुष्कर (lotus/lotus leaf)
तोय-बिन्दु (drop of water)

Educational Q&A

Freedom from both craving (kāma) and hatred (dveṣa) is presented as the mark of inner purity: even when desires and faults exist in the world, they do not ‘stick’ to the disciplined person, like water on a lotus leaf.

A Brahmin speaker is articulating his ethical-spiritual stance to others in the Ashvamedhika Parva, using a vivid simile (water on a lotus leaf) to describe his non-attachment and non-aversion.