Adhyāya 6: Vidura’s Saṃsāra-Upamā
The Allegory of the Well, Time, and Desire
मुखानि ऋतवो मासा: पादा द्वादश कीर्तिता: । ये तु वृक्ष निकृन््तन्ति मूषिका: सततोत्थिता:
mukhāni ṛtavo māsāḥ pādā dvādaśa kīrtitāḥ | ye tu vṛkṣa nikṛntanti mūṣikāḥ satatotthitāḥ ||
“Its ‘faces’ are the seasons; its months are spoken of as its twelve ‘feet’. Yet there are ever-rising mice that keep gnawing and cutting down the tree.” (Vidura uses this image to warn that time is structured and measurable, but it is also relentlessly consumed by subtle, ceaseless forces—so one should not be careless about life, duty, and the consequences of delay.)
विदुर उवाच
Time is orderly (seasons and months) yet relentlessly consuming (the ever-active ‘mice’). Therefore one should act with awareness and responsibility, not postponing dharmic duties or assuming life is secure.
Vidura speaks in a reflective, admonitory tone, employing a metaphor of a tree whose structure is marked by seasons and months, while unseen, ceaseless forces (mice) continually gnaw it down—an image meant to awaken urgency and ethical clarity amid grief and aftermath.