ते च तस्य समभ्याशे निक्षिप्याण्डानि सर्वश: । समुद्राम्भस्यमज्जन्त चरन्तो भीष्म पक्षिण: । तेषामण्डानि सर्वेषां भक्षयामास पापकृत्,भीष्म! हंसपर विश्वास हो जानेके कारण वे सभी पक्षी अपने अण्डे उसके पास ही रखकर समुद्रके जलमें गोते लगाते और विचरते थे; परंतु वह पापी हंस उन सबके अण्डे खा जाता था
te ca tasya samabhyāśe nikṣipyāṇḍāni sarvaśaḥ | samudrāmbhasy amajjanta caranto bhīṣma pakṣiṇaḥ | teṣām aṇḍāni sarveṣāṃ bhakṣayāmāsa pāpakṛt, bhīṣma! haṃsaḥ ||
And those birds, O Bhīṣma, trusting him, would place all their eggs close by him and then dive and roam about in the waters of the sea. But that wicked swan would devour the eggs of them all—an image of betrayal, where confidence is exploited and innocence is harmed.
शिशुपाल उवाच
Trust (viśvāsa) is ethically binding: exploiting another’s confidence—especially the helpless (like eggs left for safekeeping)—is portrayed as pāpa (sin/adharma). The verse condemns betrayal and warns that apparent guardianship can mask predation.
Śiśupāla addresses Bhīṣma and recounts a vignette: birds, believing a swan to be trustworthy, leave their eggs near him while they dive and wander in the sea; the swan, however, is an evil-doer who eats all the eggs.