Gratitude, Discernment, and the Escalation of Power (Śvā–Dvipī–Vyāghra–Nāga–Siṃha–Śarabha Itihāsa)
लेलिहा[मानस्तृषित: पुच्छास्फोटनतत्पर: । व्यादितास्य: क्षुधाभुग्न: प्रार्थयानस्तदामिषम्
lelihāmānas tṛṣitaḥ pucchāsphoṭana-tatparaḥ | vyāditāsyaḥ kṣudhābhugnaḥ prārthayānas tadāmiṣam ||
Bhishma said: “Licking his lips in thirst, intent on wagging his tail, his mouth gaping open and weakened by hunger, he kept begging then for that morsel of flesh.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights how acute hunger and thirst can drive a being into pleading and submissive behavior, setting up an ethical reflection in Śānti Parva on compassion, restraint, and the moral weight of exploiting another’s desperation.
Bhishma describes a creature (implicitly an animal) in a pitiable state—thirsty, hungry, mouth open, tail wagging—begging for a piece of meat, as part of a larger illustrative episode used to teach dharma.