ईदृशश्वाप्यगस्त्यो हि कथितस्ते मयानघ । ब्रवीम्यहं ब्रूहि वा त्वमगस्त्यात् क्षत्रियं वरम्
īdṛśaś cāpy agastyo hi kathitas te mayānagha | bravīmy ahaṃ brūhi vā tvam agastyāt kṣatriyaṃ varam ||
Bhīṣma dit : «Ô toi sans péché, je t’ai décrit Agastya comme un sage d’une puissance extraordinaire, un brahmane d’une telle stature. Je l’affirme sans détour ; ou bien, si tu connais quelque kṣatriya supérieur à Agastya, dis-le-moi.»
भीष्म उवाच
Bhīṣma underscores the exceptional spiritual and moral authority of the sage Agastya, implying that true greatness is measured by tapas, wisdom, and dharma rather than by royal power; he challenges the listener to name any Kṣatriya who surpasses such a Brahmin sage.
In the course of instruction, Bhīṣma has been describing Agastya’s extraordinary stature. He now presses the interlocutor with a rhetorical challenge: either accept Agastya’s unmatched excellence or present a Kṣatriya who is superior to him.