Dāna-Śreṣṭhatā: Abhaya, Anugraha, and the Ethics of Honoring the Worthy (दानश्रेष्ठता: अभय-अनुग्रह-विप्रपूजा)
यत् ते वने5स्मिन् नृपते दृष्टं दिव्यं निदर्शनम्
yat te vane 'smin nṛpate dṛṣṭaṃ divyaṃ nidarśanam | nareśvara rājan asmin vane tvaṃ yo divyo dṛśyo dṛṣṭavān sa svargasyaikā jhāṅkā āsīt | nṛpaśreṣṭha bhūpāla tvam ātmanaḥ patnyā saha asminn eva śarīreṇa kiñcit kālaṃ svargīya-sukham anubhūtavān asi ||
Dijo Cyavana: «Oh rey, el prodigioso espectáculo divino que contemplaste en este bosque no fue sino un atisbo del cielo. Oh señor de los hombres, el mejor de los gobernantes: junto con tu reina has gustado, en este mismo cuerpo, la dicha celestial por un breve instante. Tómalo como señal: los frutos del mérito pueden experimentarse, pero son fugaces si no se asientan en el dharma.»
च्यवन उवाच
The verse underscores that extraordinary pleasures and visions—like a glimpse of heaven—can arise as fruits of merit, but they are temporary. A ruler should not cling to such experiences; instead, he should ground his life in dharma, which alone gives lasting welfare beyond momentary delight.
Sage Cyavana addresses a king who has witnessed a divine spectacle in a forest. Cyavana explains that what the king saw was a preview of heaven, and that the king, along with his queen, briefly experienced heavenly happiness while still embodied.