Udyoga Parva, Adhyaya 31 — Yudhiṣṭhira’s Instructions to Sañjaya
Peace Appeal and Five-Village Proposal
परप्रयुक्त: पुरुषो विचेष्टते सूत्रप्रोता दारुमयीव योषा । इमं दृष्टवा नियमं पाण्डवस्य मन्ये परं कर्म दैवं मनुष्यात्
sañjaya uvāca | paraprayuktaḥ puruṣo viceṣṭate sūtraprotā dārumayīva yoṣā | imaṃ dṛṣṭvā niyamaṃ pāṇḍavasya manye paraṃ karma daivaṃ manuṣyāt, mahārāja ||
サンジャヤは言った。「人は他の力に促されてこそ動く—糸で操られた木の人形が、紐の引きに従って動き舞うように。大王よ、この苛酷な拘束がパーンドゥの子(ユディシュティラ)に降りかかるのを見て、私は、人の努力よりも運命—神の定め—が勝るのだと思うに至った。」
संजय उवाच
Human beings often appear to act as if pulled by unseen strings—by divine ordinance and the momentum of past actions—so that destiny (daiva) can seem stronger than personal effort (puruṣakāra). The verse frames a tension between moral agency and providential necessity.
Sañjaya, reporting to King Dhṛtarāṣṭra, reflects on the Pāṇḍava Yudhiṣṭhira’s constrained situation and suffering. Using the image of a string-controlled wooden puppet, he suggests that events are being driven by forces beyond mere human choice, implying the dominance of daiva in the unfolding crisis.