Dama-pradhāna-dharma (Self-restraint as the Root of Dharma) — Śānti-parva 154
गृध्र उदाच अद्य वर्षसहस््रं मे साग्रं जातस्य मानुषा: । न च पश्यामि जीवन्तं मृतं स्त्रीपुंनपुंसकम्,गीधने कहा--मनुष्यो! मुझे जन्म लिये आज एक हजार वर्षसे अधिक हो गये; परंतु मैंने कभी किसी स्टत्री-पुरुष या नपुंसकको मरनेके बाद फिर जीवित होते नहीं देखा
gṛdhra uvāca: adya varṣa-sahasraṃ me sāgraṃ jātasya, mānuṣāḥ; na ca paśyāmi jīvantaṃ mṛtaṃ strī-puṃ-napuṃsakam.
禿鷲は言った。「おお人間よ、我が生を受けてより今日まで千年余が過ぎた。だが女であれ男であれ、あるいは宦官であれ、死してなお生に還った者を、我は一度も見たことがない。」
जम्बुक उवाच
The verse underscores the inevitability and finality of death in embodied life, urging sober ethical reflection: since no one is seen to return after dying, one should live with awareness of impermanence and act according to dharma rather than clinging to transient conditions.
A vulture addresses humans and speaks from long-lived experience, stating that in over a thousand years it has never witnessed any person—female, male, or eunuch—come back to life after death, using this observation as a didactic point within the Shanti Parva’s reflective discourse.