Varṇa-dharma and Rājadharma: Yudhiṣṭhira’s Inquiry and Bhīṣma’s Normative Outline (वर्णधर्म-राजधर्म-प्रश्नोत्तरम्)
मन्त्रिणो वालखिल्याश्ष सारस्वत्यो गणस्तथा । महर्षिर्भगवान् गर्गस्तस्य सांवत्सरो5भवत्
mantriṇo vālakhilyāś ca sārasvatyo gaṇas tathā | maharṣir bhagavān gargas tasya sāṁvatsaro 'bhavat ||
Bhishma dit : «Les sages Vālakhilya, et de même le groupe de sages demeurant sur les rives de la Sarasvatī, servirent comme ses ministres. Le vénérable grand rishi Garga devint son sāṁvatsara — l’astrologue de cour et le calculateur de l’année.»
भीष्म उवाच
Righteous governance is strengthened when a ruler relies on disciplined, learned sages for counsel and on competent experts (such as a jyotiṣa authority) for orderly regulation of time and ritual—showing that dharma in public life depends on wise advisors and proper institutions.
Bhishma describes the composition of a ruler’s court: the Vālakhilyas and the Sarasvatī-bank sages function as ministers, while the revered seer Garga serves as the court’s annual time-reckoner/astrologer (sāṁvatsara).