इदमाद्विकमव्यग्रं कुर्वद्धिर्नियतैः सदा । नृपैर्भरतशार्टूल प्राप्यते श्रीरनुत्तमा
idam ādvikaṁ avyagraṁ kurvadbhir niyataiḥ sadā | nṛpair bharataśārdūla prāpyate śrīr anuttamā ||
Bhīṣma dijo: “¡Oh tigre entre los Bhāratas! Cuando los reyes disciplinados—habiendo dominado la mente y los sentidos—recitan cada día esta fórmula sagrada con atención serena e inquebrantable, alcanzan la prosperidad y la excelencia supremas.”
भीष्म उवाच
Regular, disciplined practice—especially daily recitation done with an undistracted mind and controlled senses—leads to the highest form of prosperity and excellence. The verse frames prosperity as a fruit of inner restraint and steady ethical practice, not mere power.
In Anuśāsana Parva, Bhīṣma is instructing Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and right conduct. Here he emphasizes a practice suitable for rulers: calm, focused daily recitation by self-restrained kings, which yields unsurpassed royal fortune (śrī).