त्रिवर्गविचारः
Tri-varga Deliberation: Dharma, Artha, Kāma
क्षमा धृतिरहिंसा च समता सत्यमार्जवम् | इन्द्रियाभिजयो दाक्ष्यं मार्दव॑ हवीरचापलम्
kṣamā dhṛtir ahiṃsā ca samatā satyam ārjavam | indriyābhijayo dākṣyaṃ mārdavaṃ hrīr acāpalam ||
Bhīṣma dit : «La patience, la constance, la non-violence (ahiṃsā), l’équanimité, la vérité et la droiture ; la maîtrise des sens, l’aptitude, la douceur, la pudeur et l’absence d’inconstance — lorsque ces vertus s’élèvent et s’établissent en un homme, c’est cela qu’on nomme dama, la maîtrise de soi.»
भीष्म उवाच
Bhīṣma defines dama (self-restraint) not as mere suppression but as the stable emergence of a cluster of virtues—patience, firmness, non-violence, equanimity, truth, straightforwardness, sensory mastery, competence, gentleness, modesty, and steadiness—showing that ethical character and inner discipline are inseparable.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma after the war, Bhīṣma teaches Yudhiṣṭhira about moral and spiritual discipline. Here he enumerates the qualities that constitute dama, presenting a practical ethical profile of a self-controlled person.