Mahārāja Sagara, Kapila Muni, and the Deliverance of the Sixty Thousand Sons
यस्तालजङ्घान् यवनाञ्छकान् हैहयबर्बरान् । नावधीद् गुरुवाक्येन चक्रे विकृतवेषिण: ॥ ५ ॥ मुण्डाञ्छ्मश्रुधरान् कांश्चिन्मुक्तकेशार्धमुण्डितान् । अनन्तर्वासस: कांश्चिदबहिर्वाससोऽपरान् ॥ ६ ॥
yas tālajaṅghān yavanāñ chakān haihaya-barbarān nāvadhīd guru-vākyena cakre vikṛta-veṣiṇaḥ
Siguiendo la orden de su maestro espiritual Aurva, el rey Sagara no mató a los pueblos rudos como los Tālajaṅghas, Yavanas, Śakas, Haihayas y Barbaras. En cambio, les impuso atuendos distintos: a unos los rapó pero les dejó bigote, a otros les permitió el cabello suelto, a otros los dejó medio rapados, a algunos sin ropa interior y a otros sin vestidura exterior. Así quedaron diferenciados por su indumentaria, pero Sagara no los exterminó.
This verse highlights that even in matters of punishment, one should follow the guru’s instruction; the king refrained from killing and instead imposed a corrective, non-lethal consequence.
Śukadeva Gosvāmī narrates this history to King Parīkṣit while describing events connected with the Sagara dynasty and related lineages.
Discipline guided by higher wisdom should be restrained and purposeful—avoid unnecessary harm, and apply consequences that reform rather than merely retaliate.