Ākiṃcanya–Tyāga Upadeśa
The Instruction on Non-ownership and Renunciation
स तान्यतिमनोज्ञानि विहगानां रुतानि वै
sa tāny atimanojñāni vihagānāṃ rutāni vai
Bhishma said: “Indeed, he listened to those exceedingly delightful calls of the birds”—sounds so pleasing to the mind that they draw one inward, steadying the heart and supporting a life of restraint and right conduct.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights the mind’s responsiveness to refined, non-violent pleasures (like birdsong), implying that calm attention and gentle sensory experience can aid composure, restraint, and a dharmic disposition.
Bhīṣma describes a scene in which a person (contextually, the subject of the surrounding passage) hears the exceptionally pleasing calls of birds, using this detail to set a contemplative tone within the Śānti Parva’s ethical instruction.