Bhṛtya-niyoga: Role-appropriate appointment of servants and protection of the royal treasury (भृत्यनियोगः कोशरक्षणं च)
इति श्रीमहा भारते शान्तिपर्वणि राजधर्मानुशासनपर्वणि श्रवर्षिसंवादे अष्टादशाधिकशततमो< ध्याय:
iti śrīmahābhārate śāntiparvaṇi rājadharmānuśāsanaparvaṇi śravarṣi-saṃvāde aṣṭādaśādhika-śatatamo 'dhyāyaḥ | iti śrīmahābhārata-śāntiparvake antargata rājadharmānuśāsanaparvameṃ kuttā aur ṛṣikā-saṃvāda-viṣayaka eka sau aṭhārahavāṃ adhyāya pūrā huā |
Así, en el santo Mahābhārata, dentro del Śānti Parva—en particular en la sección Rājadharmānuśāsana, instrucción sobre el dharma real—concluye el capítulo centésimo decimoctavo, relativo al diálogo en el que interviene el Ṛṣi Śrava. En otras palabras, queda cerrado el Capítulo 118 de la porción Rājadharmānuśāsana del Śānti Parva, cuyo tema es el diálogo entre un perro y una asceta, subrayando la reflexión ética en el marco de la realeza y la conducta justa.
भीष्म उवाच
As a chapter-colophon, the line signals that the surrounding discourse belongs to the Śānti Parva’s instruction on rājadharma (ethical kingship). By framing the episode as a dialogue (here, involving a dog and a female ascetic), it emphasizes that moral insight can arise through questioning, debate, and reflection—supporting the broader aim of guiding rulers toward just conduct.
This is the closing colophon of the chapter: it announces that, within the Mahābhārata’s Śānti Parva and its rājadharma instruction-section, the 118th chapter has concluded, identified by its subject matter (the dog–female ascetic dialogue) and by association with Śrava Ṛṣi’s dialogue context.