कपिल–स्यूमरश्मि संवादः
Kapila and Syūmaraśmi on Renunciation, Householder Support, and Epistemic Authority
यस्मादुद्विजते विद्वन् सर्वलोको वृकादिव | क्रोशतस्तीरमासाद्य यथा सर्वे जलेचरा:
yasmād udvijate vidvan sarvaloko vṛkād iva | krośatas tīram āsādya yathā sarve jalecarāḥ ||
学識ある者よ、誰のゆえに全世界が狼を恐れるように身をすくめて退くのか。水に棲む生きものが叫び声を聞けば、皆おびえて岸へと走り寄る、そのように。
तुलाधार उवाच
One should not become a cause of fear to others; inducing dread in living beings is a moral fault. The verse uses vivid similes to stress that a harmful person makes the world shrink away, so dharma favors harmlessness and reassurance.
Tulādhāra addresses a learned interlocutor and illustrates how beings instinctively flee from danger: people recoil from a wolf, and aquatic creatures rush to the bank when they hear alarming cries. The imagery supports his ethical instruction about avoiding conduct that terrifies others.