Adhyāya 6: Vidura’s Saṃsāra-Upamā
The Allegory of the Well, Time, and Desire
विदुर उवाच उपमानमिदं राजन् मोक्षविद्धिरुदाह्तम् । सुकृतं विन्दते येन परलोकेषु मानव:
vidura uvāca upamānam idaṁ rājan mokṣa-vidhir udāhṛtam | sukṛtaṁ vindate yena paralokeṣu mānavaḥ ||
ヴィドゥラは言った。「王よ、これは解脱(モークシャ)へ至る方法を明らかにするために説かれた譬えである。これに従う者は、来世の諸世界において善業の果報を得る。」
विदुर उवाच
Vidura frames his counsel as an upamāna (analogy) meant to clarify mokṣa-vidhi—the practical discipline leading toward liberation—while also emphasizing that such right conduct yields sukṛta (merit) that bears fruit in the hereafter.
In the Stree Parva’s grief-filled aftermath of the war, Vidura addresses the king and introduces an instructive comparison, preparing to explain a path of ethical and spiritual practice that can guide a person beyond sorrow toward higher good and ultimate release.