Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
स गार्हस्थ्याच्च्युतश्न त्वं मोक्ष चानाप्य दुर्विदम् । उभयोरन्तराले वै वर्तसे मोक्षवार्तिक:
sa gārhasthyāccyutaś ca tvaṃ mokṣaṃ cānāpya durvidam | ubhayor antarāle vai vartase mokṣavārtikaḥ ||
ビーシュマは言った。「汝は家住者(ガールハஸ્થ्य)の道から外れた。しかも、悟り難き解脱(モークシャ)にも到っていない。ゆえに汝は両者の狭間に立つ—解脱を語りながら、世の務めにも真の離脱にも定まらぬのだ。」
भीष्य उवाच
Bhīṣma criticizes a liminal, inconsistent stance: abandoning the responsibilities of the householder’s dharma without attaining genuine liberation. Ethical life requires integrity—either fulfill one’s rightful duties with discipline, or pursue renunciation in a way that truly leads toward realization, not merely talk about it.
In the instruction-heavy Shānti Parva, Bhīṣma addresses a listener’s conduct and spiritual claims. He points out that the person has left the gārhasthya way of life but has not reached mokṣa, and therefore remains suspended between worldly duty and true renunciation—functioning mainly as a ‘speaker of mokṣa’ rather than a practitioner established in a path.