Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
ज्ञानेन कुरुते यत्नं यत्नेन प्राप्पते महत् | महद् द्वन््धप्रमोक्षाय सा सिद्धिरया वयो5तिगा
jñānena kurute yatnaṃ yatnena prāpyate mahat | mahad dvandva-pramokṣāya sā siddhir iyam atyagā ||
Janaka said: One exerts oneself through knowledge; through such effort one attains the Great (realization). That Great realization is the means to release from the pairs of opposites—pleasure and pain and the like. This is the true accomplishment, one that even transcends Time, that is, death.
जनक उवाच
Knowledge must be made active through disciplined effort; that effort culminates in profound Self-realization, which frees one from the tyranny of opposites like pleasure and pain and is therefore a true spiritual attainment that transcends even death.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on peace and liberation, King Janaka speaks as a teacher, explaining how sustained striving grounded in knowledge leads to the highest realization and to freedom from worldly dualities.