Vidura-nīti: Atithi-dharma, Trust, Counsel-Secrecy, and Traits of Sustainable Rule
Udyoga Parva, Adhyāya 38
दुष्कुलीन: कुलीनो वा मर्यादां यो न लड्घयेत् । धमपिक्षी मृदुर्हीमान् स कुलीनशताद् वर:
duṣkulīnaḥ kulīno vā maryādāṃ yo na laṅghayet | dharmāpekṣī mṛdur hrīmān sa kulīnaśatād varaḥ ||
Vidura said: Whether one is born in a low family or a noble one, the person who does not transgress proper bounds, who looks to dharma as the guiding standard, who is gentle in disposition and possessed of modest shame—such a person is superior to even a hundred who are merely high-born.
विदुर उवाच
Moral worth is measured by restraint, dharma-guided conduct, gentleness, and modesty—not by birth or social status; a virtuous person surpasses many who are only high-born.
In Udyoga Parva, Vidura offers ethical counsel (Vidura-nīti) during the tense pre-war negotiations, emphasizing standards of character and proper conduct as the true marks of nobility.