बक-गौतमाख्यानम् / The Baka–Gautama Account
On Gratitude and Friendship Ethics
बिश्रत्कृष्णाजिनं वासो हेमप्रवरतारकम् | नेत्र चैक ललाटेन भास्करप्रतिमं वहन्
bibhrat kṛṣṇājinaṃ vāso hemapravaratārakam | netraṃ caikaṃ lalāṭena bhāskarapratimaṃ vahan |
Bhīṣma said: “He wore a garment of black antelope-skin, adorned with excellent golden star-like ornaments; and he bore a single eye upon his forehead, radiant like the sun.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical prestige of tapas and restraint through ascetic insignia (kṛṣṇājina) and extraordinary radiance (sun-like eye), suggesting that inner discipline and spiritual power are recognized through symbolic marks rather than worldly status.
Bhīṣma is describing a remarkable figure’s appearance: he is clad in black antelope-skin, ornamented with fine golden star-like decorations, and possesses a single, sun-bright eye on the forehead—an emblem of exceptional, possibly ascetic or divine, potency.