कामद्रुम-रूपकः तथा शरीर-पुर-रूपकः
The Desire-Tree and the Body-as-City Metaphors
धमखियानेषु सर्वेषु सत्याख्याने च यद् वसु । दशेदमृक्सहस्राणि निर्मथ्यामृतमुद्भुतम्
vyāsa uvāca | dharmākhyāneṣu sarveṣu satyākhyāne ca yad vasu | daśedam ṛk-sahasrāṇi nirmathyāmṛtam adbhutam | yathā kūrma ihāṅgāni prasārya viniyacchati | evam evendriya-grāmaṃ buddhiḥ sṛṣṭvā niyacchati |
Vyāsa said: Among all the narratives that teach Dharma, and among the accounts that uphold Truth, this is the essential treasure. It is a wondrous nectar distilled by churning ten thousand Ṛgvedic verses. Just as a tortoise extends its limbs and then draws them back in, so too does the intellect send the whole community of the senses outward toward their objects and then restrain and withdraw them again—showing that mastery of oneself is the heart of dharma and truth.
व्यास उवाच
The verse teaches that the essence of dharma and truth is inner mastery: the intellect should be able to deploy the senses when needed and withdraw them from sense-objects, like a tortoise drawing in its limbs.
Vyāsa presents a distilled ‘nectar’ of teaching—claimed as an essence extracted from vast Vedic material—and illustrates it with a vivid simile: the tortoise’s withdrawal becomes a model for disciplined control of the senses by buddhi.