Adhyaya 27 — Madālasa’s Instruction to King Alarka: Royal Ethics, Self-Conquest, and Statecraft
ज्ञेयाग्निविस्फुलिङ्गानां बीजचेष्टा च शाल्मलेः ।
चन्द्रसूर्यस्वरूपेण नीत्यर्थे पृथिवीक्षितः ॥
jñeyāgni-visphuliṅgānāṃ bīja-ceṣṭā ca śālmaleḥ | candra-sūrya-svarūpeṇa nītyarthe pṛthivīkṣitaḥ ||
Aux fins de la politique, le souverain doit comprendre la nature des étincelles du feu et l’activité de la semence (telle celle du śālmali), et prendre pour modèles de gouvernement les rôles de la Lune et du Soleil.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "dharma", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Governance requires grasping both sudden escalation (sparks) and slow maturation (seeds). The Moon–Sun pairing suggests balancing soothing welfare with energizing discipline and visibility.
Didactic nīti section; not directly pancalakṣaṇa content.
Sparks indicate how small provocations can ignite conflict; seeds indicate how subtle intentions mature into outcomes. Moon and Sun symbolize the twin royal powers: saumyatā (gentle nurture) and tejas (radiant authority).