पत्नीशाला कृता यस्य परेषां वाहिनीमुखम्
patnīśālā kṛtā yasya pareṣāṃ vāhinīmukham
Ambarīṣa said: “For one whose very ‘front of the army’ is turned into a ‘wives’ pavilion’—that is, whose martial vanguard is reduced to a place of domestic dependence and indulgence—such a person cannot truly stand firm in the duties of leadership and righteous conduct.”
अम्बरीष उवाच
The verse uses a sharp metaphor to warn that a leader who lets sensuality or domestic indulgence dominate his public duty becomes unfit for steadfast, righteous leadership; self-mastery is presented as essential to dharma and governance.
In the didactic setting of the Śānti Parva, Ambarīṣa speaks in a moralizing tone, criticizing a type of ruler/warrior whose military resolve is metaphorically ‘converted’ into a private pleasure-space, implying loss of discipline and public responsibility.