Adhyāya 118: Saciva-parīkṣā
Testing and Appointment of Ministers/Servants
अष्टपादूर्ध्नयन: शरभो वनगोचर: । तं सिंहं हन्तुमागच्छन्मुनेस्तस्य निवेशनम्
aṣṭapādūrdhvanayanaḥ śarabho vanagocaraḥ | taṃ siṃhaṃ hantum āgacchan munes tasya niveśanam |
Bhīṣma dit : Un śarabha hors du commun, bête des forêts aux huit pattes et aux yeux tournés vers le haut, vint jusqu’à la demeure du sage avec l’intention de tuer ce lion. Prédateur violent, il répandait la terreur parmi les créatures des bois en s’approchant de l’ermitage, apportant la menace du sang dans un lieu voué à la paix et à la maîtrise de soi.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse sets up an ethical contrast: a place of tapas and restraint (the sage’s dwelling) is threatened by unchecked हिंसा (violence). It prepares the listener to reflect on dharma as protection—how the strong should be restrained from harming the vulnerable, and how peace can be disrupted when predatory impulses dominate.
A powerful śarabha—described as eight-footed and upward-eyed—arrives in the forest and comes to the sage’s residence with the intention of killing a lion. Its approach terrifies other forest creatures, signaling imminent danger at the hermitage.