ततः पद्मोद्भवो राजन् देवदेव: पितामह: । उवाच मधुरं वाक्यमर्थवद्धेतुभूषितम्,राजन्! तब कमलजन्मा देवाधिदेव पितामहने मधुर स्वरमें युक्तियुक्त सार्थक वचन कहा--
tataḥ padmodbhavo rājan devadevaḥ pitāmahaḥ | uvāca madhuraṃ vākyam arthavad hetubhūṣitam, rājan ||
Alors, ô roi, l’Aïeul né du lotus—Brahmā, le dieu des dieux—parla d’une voix douce, proférant des paroles pleines de sens et ornées d’un raisonnement juste, ô roi.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights an ethical ideal of discourse: authoritative instruction should be gentle in tone (madhuram) yet substantial (arthavat) and grounded in clear reasoning (hetubhūṣitam).
Bhīṣma reports that Brahmā—the Lotus-born Grandfather—begins speaking to the king, introducing a didactic passage where divine authority delivers reasoned guidance.