मृदु-तीक्ष्ण-नीति तथा दुष्टलक्षण-विज्ञानम्
Measured Policy and the Recognition of Malicious Disposition
करोत्यभीक्ष्णं संसृष्टमसंसृष्टश्ष भाषते । अदृष्टितो न कुरुते दृष्टो नैवाभिभाषते
karoty abhīkṣṇaṁ saṁsṛṣṭam asaṁsṛṣṭaś ca bhāṣate | adṛṣṭito na kurute dṛṣṭo naivābhibhāṣate ||
Bhishma said: “A man may repeatedly seek intimacy and establish association, yet when apart he speaks as though unconnected. Having promised to do a task, he does not do it once he is out of sight, and even when face to face he will not speak at all. Know that such a person’s mind is filled with malice and crooked intent.”
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma teaches how to recognize inner malice: a person who alternates between forced closeness and denial of connection, breaks promises when unobserved, and refuses honest communication even in direct presence shows a crooked, harmful disposition.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on dharma and conduct, Bhishma is describing behavioral signs by which one may judge character—especially the unreliable, two-faced person whose speech and actions change depending on presence or absence.