Udyoga Parva Adhyāya 58 — Saṃjaya’s Audience and Kṛṣṇa’s Deterrent Counsel (संजय-प्रवेशः कृष्णवाक्यं च)
वाचं स वदतां श्रेष्ठो ह्वादिनीं वचनक्षमाम् | त्रासिनीं धार्तराष्ट्राणां मृदुपूर्वां सुदारुणाम्
vācaṃ sa vadatāṃ śreṣṭho hvādinīṃ vacanakṣamām | trāsinīṃ dhārtarāṣṭrāṇāṃ mṛdupūrvāṃ sudāruṇām
サञ्जャヤは言った。「彼――語り手の中でも最も卓れた者――は、耳に心地よく整った言葉を発したが、それは同時にドリタラーシュトラの子らを震え上がらせた。柔らかく始まり、しかし終わりには真実を断ち切るほどの苛烈な厳しさとなった。」
संजय उवाच
Ethical speech can be both courteous and forceful: one may begin gently to maintain decorum and receptivity, yet speak with firm severity when confronting adharma. The verse praises disciplined rhetoric—pleasant in form, truthful and even fear-inducing in its moral consequence.
Sañjaya describes a principal speaker (contextually, a leading counselor or envoy in the Udyoga Parva’s negotiations) delivering a carefully crafted address: pleasing and articulate, but alarming to the Dhārtarāṣṭras because it exposes their peril and wrongdoing, moving from soft opening to stern admonition.