Adhyāya 57: Tapas–Dāna Phala
On the Fruits of Austerity and Giving
एवं योगबलाद् विप्रो मोहयामास पार्थिवम् । क्षणेन तद् वनं॑ चैव ते चैवाप्सरसां गणा:
evaṁ yogabalād vipro mohayāmāsa pārthivam | kṣaṇena tad vanaṁ caiva te caivāpsarasāṁ gaṇāḥ |
Bhīṣma dijo: «Así, por el poder de su yoga, el sabio brahmán sumió al rey en la ilusión. En un solo instante, aquel bosque y aquellas mismas compañías de Apsaras desaparecieron de la vista.»
भीष्म उवाच
Worldly power and royal authority are limited; yogic/ascetic mastery can dispel pride and induce moha to correct wrongdoing. The ethical thrust is humility before dharma and restraint before spiritual potency.
Bhīṣma narrates that a brahmin-sage, using yogic power, bewilders the king; instantly the forest scene and the Apsarases’ host disappear from view, signaling the sage’s control over perception and the king’s chastening.