मुच्यतां त्रिदशेन्द्रोडयं मत्प्रियं कुरु भाविनि,'भाविनि! ये देवताओंके राजा इन्द्र हैं, इन्हें छोड़ दो। मेरा यह प्रिय कार्य करो। बोलो, मैं तुम्हारी कौन-सी अभिलाषा पूर्ण करूँ। तुम जिस किसी मनोरथको पाना चाहो उसे बताओ'
mucyatāṃ tridaśendro 'yaṃ matpriyaṃ kuru bhāvini | bhāvini ye devatānāṃ rājā indraḥ, etān muñca | mama idaṃ priyaṃ kāryaṃ kuru | brūhi, ahaṃ tava kāṃ kāmām abhilāṣāṃ pūrayāmi | tvaṃ yaṃ yaṃ manorathaṃ prāptum icchasi taṃ vada ||
Bhīṣma berkata: “Bebaskanlah Indra ini, raja para dewa. Lakukanlah yang berkenan bagiku, wahai wanita mulia. Lepaskan dia dan penuhi permintaanku ini. Katakan—hasratmu yang mana akan kupenuhi? Nyatakan apa pun keinginan yang hendak kau capai.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse foregrounds ethical restraint and compassionate action: even when one has power over another, dharma is served by releasing the worthy and by channeling one’s agency into a request that benefits order and righteousness, not domination.
Bhishma addresses a noble lady and urges her to release Indra, identified as the king of the gods. He frames this as a personal request and, in return, offers to fulfill any desire she may name—establishing a boon-like exchange grounded in persuasion rather than coercion.