Nāradasya Rājadharma-praśnāḥ
Nārada’s Examination of Royal Ethics
षडनर्था महाराज कच्चित् ते पृष्ठतः कृता: । निद्रा55लस्यं भयं क्रोधोमार्दवं दीर्घसूत्रता
ṣaḍ anarthā mahārāja kaccit te pṛṣṭhataḥ kṛtāḥ | nidrā ālasyaṁ bhayaṁ krodho mārdavaṁ dīrghasūtratā ||
ナーラダは言った。「大王よ、汝はまことにこの六つの破滅の因を退けたか——不覚の眠り(怠惰なる昏さ)、怠け、恐れ、怒り、剛を要するところでの柔弱、そして先延ばしである。」
नारद उवाच
A ruler (and any responsible person) must overcome six destructive tendencies—torpor, laziness, fear, anger, undue softness, and procrastination—because they undermine judgment, discipline, and timely action, leading to personal and political ruin.
The sage Nārada addresses the king with a probing question, testing whether he has conquered key inner weaknesses that threaten effective rule. The verse functions as a moral audit of readiness for righteous governance.