Sahadeva on Attachment (mamatā), ‘mameti/na mameti’, and the Middle Path of Conduct
शारीरं द्रव्यमुत्सूज्य पृथिवीमनुशासत: । यो धर्मो यत् सुखं वा स्यात् सुहृदां तत् तथास्तु नः,परंतु शरीरके उपयोगमें आनेवाले द्रव्योंकी ममता त्यागकर अनासक्ताभावसे पृथिवीका शासन करनेवाले राजाको जिस धर्म अथवा जिस सुखकी प्राप्ति होती हो, वह हमारे हितैषी सुहृदोंको मिले
śārīraṁ dravyam utsṛjya pṛthivīm anuśāsataḥ | yo dharmo yat sukhaṁ vā syāt suhṛdāṁ tat tathāstu naḥ ||
サハデーヴァは言った。「身の享楽のための財や資源に対する『我がもの』という執着を捨て、離欲の心で大地を治める王が得るそのダルマ、あるいはその安楽が、われらに善意を寄せる友なる者たちにも同じく授けられますように。」
सहदेव उवाच
True royal governance is grounded in non-attachment: a king should relinquish possessiveness over bodily pleasures and personal goods, rule the earth with an unselfish mind, and thereby attain dharma and well-being—benefits that Sahadeva wishes to extend to all well-wishing friends.
In the Shanti Parva’s discourse on righteous conduct and statecraft, Sahadeva speaks a benedictive wish: that the dharma and happiness gained by a self-controlled, non-possessive ruler who administers the kingdom properly should accrue to their allies and well-wishers.