Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
तान्येतानि यथोक्तानि सौक्ष्म्यादीनि जनाधिप । एकार्थसमवेतानि वाक्यं मम निशामय,जनेश्वर! जिस वाक्यमें पूर्वोक्त सौक्ष्म्म आदि गुण एक अर्थमें सम्मिलित हों, मेरे वैसे ही वाक्यको आप श्रवण करें
tāny etāni yathoktāni saukṣmyādīni janādhipa | ekārthasamavetāni vākyaṁ mama niśāmaya ||
Dijo Bhishma: Oh señor del pueblo, estas cualidades, comenzando por la sutileza, tal como fueron expuestas antes —cuando se reúnen en un único sentido pretendido—, escucha ahora mi declaración.
भीष्य उवाच
Bhishma emphasizes that good counsel is not merely a list of qualities; it becomes effective when those qualities are unified into a single, coherent purport that the listener can grasp and apply.
In the Shanti Parva’s instructional setting, Bhishma addresses the king and signals a transition: having mentioned qualities such as subtlety earlier, he now asks the listener to hear a statement where those qualities are integrated into one meaning.