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Shloka 50

Udyoga-parva Adhyāya 34 — Vidura’s Counsel on Deliberation, Speech-Discipline, and Dharmic Kingship

जरा रूप॑ हरति हि धैर्यमाशा मृत्यु: प्राणान्‌ धर्मचर्यामसूया । क्रोध: श्रियं शीलमनार्यसेवा हियं काम: सर्वमेवाभिमान:,बुढ़ापा (सुन्दर) रूपको, आशा धीरताको, मृत्यु प्राणोंको, असूया (गुणोंमें दोष देखनेका स्वभाव) धर्माचरणको, क्रोध लक्ष्मीको, नीच पुरुषोंकी सेवा सत्स्वभभावको, काम लज्जाको और अभिमान सर्वस्वको नष्ट कर देता है

jarā rūpaṃ harati hi dhairyam āśā mṛtyuḥ prāṇān dharmacaryām asūyā | krodhaḥ śriyaṃ śīlam anāryasevā hrīṃ kāmaḥ sarvam evābhimānaḥ ||

ヴィドゥラは説く。内外の衰えは定まった力から生じる。老いは美貌を奪い、望みは執着となれば不動の心を蝕む。死は命の息を取り去り、欠点をあげつらう嫉みはダルマの実践を損なう。怒りは繁栄を滅ぼし、卑しき者に仕え交われば善き品性は崩れる。欲は慎みを失わせ、そして慢心はすべてを呑み尽くし得る。

{'jarā''old age, senescence', 'rūpa': 'form, beauty, appearance', 'harati': 'takes away, removes, destroys', 'hi': 'indeed, surely', 'dhairya': 'steadfastness, courage, composure', 'āśā': 'hope, expectation, desire for outcomes', 'mṛtyuḥ': 'death', 'prāṇān': 'life-breaths, vital energies
{'jarā':
by extension life', 'dharmacaryā''practice/observance of dharma, righteous conduct', 'asūyā': 'envy
by extension life', 'dharmacaryā':
fault-finding, seeing defects in others’ virtues', 'krodhaḥ''anger', 'śriyam': 'prosperity, fortune, splendor (Śrī)', 'śīlam': 'good character, conduct, disposition', 'anārya-sevā': 'service/association with the ignoble or base-minded', 'hrīm': 'modesty, shame, moral restraint', 'kāmaḥ': 'desire, lust', 'sarvam': 'everything, the whole of one’s good', 'eva': 'indeed, entirely', 'abhimānaḥ': 'pride, self-conceit, over-identification'}
fault-finding, seeing defects in others’ virtues', 'krodhaḥ':

विदुर उवाच

V
Vidura

Educational Q&A

Certain inner forces and habits systematically destroy human excellence: aging diminishes beauty, attachment-laden hope weakens steadiness, death ends life, envy corrodes dharmic practice, anger ruins prosperity, ignoble association spoils character, lust removes modest restraint, and pride can wipe out all accumulated good. The remedy implied is vigilance, self-restraint, and choosing noble company.

In the Udyoga Parva’s pre-war negotiations and counsel, Vidura addresses the Kuru court with moral instruction (nīti). This verse is part of his admonition, highlighting the psychological and ethical dangers that can derail righteous decision-making at a critical political moment.