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Shloka 44

जनक–पराशर संवादः — वर्ण-गोत्र-धर्मविचारः

Janaka–Parāśara: Varṇa, Gotra, and Dharma Inquiry

नैव ताम्यन्ति विद्वांस: प्लवन्त: पारमम्भस: । अध्यात्मविदुषो धीरा ज्ञानं तु परमं प्लव:

naiva tāmyanti vidvāṁsaḥ plavantaḥ pāram ambhasaḥ | adhyātmaviduṣo dhīrā jñānaṁ tu paramaṁ plavaḥ ||

Bhishma said: The wise do not grow weary when they swim across to the far shore of deep waters. In the same way, steadfast men who know the truth of the Self cross the ocean of worldly existence without strain; for them, supreme knowledge itself becomes the boat.

{'na eva''not at all', 'tāmyanti': 'become weary, faint, suffer exhaustion', 'vidvāṁsaḥ': 'the wise, the learned', 'plavantaḥ': 'swimming, floating
{'na eva':
crossing by swimming', 'pāram''the farther shore, the other side', 'ambhasaḥ': 'of water
crossing by swimming', 'pāram':
of the waters', 'adhyātma-viduṣaḥ''knowers of the inner Self/spiritual principle', 'dhīrāḥ': 'steadfast, composed, courageous in understanding', 'jñānam': 'knowledge (especially liberating knowledge)', 'tu': 'indeed, but (emphatic)', 'paramam': 'supreme, highest', 'plavaḥ': 'a boat, raft
of the waters', 'adhyātma-viduṣaḥ':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma
W
waters (ambhas)
F
far shore (pāra)
S
supreme knowledge (parama-jñāna) as boat (plava)

Educational Q&A

Liberating self-knowledge functions like a boat: just as a skilled swimmer crosses deep water without exhaustion, a steadfast knower of the Self crosses the difficult ocean of saṁsāra with ease through supreme knowledge.

In Bhishma’s instruction during the Shanti Parva, he uses a vivid analogy—crossing deep waters—to explain how spiritual insight and inner steadiness enable one to overcome worldly bondage and suffering.