प्रथमं ब्रह्मण: पुत्र धर्ममाहुर्मनीषिण: । धर्मिण: पर्युपासन्ते फलं पक्वमिवाशय:
prathamaṁ brahmaṇaḥ putraṁ dharmam āhur manīṣiṇaḥ | dharmiṇaḥ paryupāsante phalaṁ pakvam ivāśayāḥ ||
ビーシュマは言った。「賢者たちは、ダルマを梵天の長子であると称える。食欲がよく熟した果実を好むように、堅固に正しさを守る者は、成熟し、健やかで、真に実りをもたらすものを求めて、ただダルマのみを奉じるのだ。」
भीष्म उवाच
Dharma is presented as primordial and foundational—so intrinsically valuable that the righteous naturally choose and cultivate it, just as one instinctively prefers ripe fruit over unripe. The verse emphasizes mature ethical discernment: devotion to Dharma is not mere rule-following but a preference for what yields the truest, ripest ‘fruit’ in life.
In the Anuśāsana Parva, Bhīṣma instructs Yudhiṣṭhira on righteous conduct and the principles that sustain society and the self. Here he elevates Dharma’s status by linking it to Brahmā’s first-born and uses a metaphor to explain why virtuous people naturally gravitate toward Dharma as their object of reverence and practice.