Nala’s Embassy to Damayantī and the Gods’ Proposal (नलस्य दूतत्वं देवप्रस्तावश्च)
स तथाक्षेषु कुशलो निश्चितो गतचेतन: । चरिष्यसि महाराज वनेषु वसती: पुनः
sa tathākṣeṣu kuśalo niścito gatacetanaḥ | cariṣyasi mahārāja vaneṣu vasatīḥ punaḥ
ヴァイシャンパーヤナは言った。「かくして、賽に巧みでありながらも、汝は決意を固め、心はもはやその執着に揺さぶられぬ。ゆえに、大王よ、汝は再び森に住み、追放の身としてそこに暮らすであろう。」
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Even when one has talent in a harmful pursuit (here, gambling), dharma requires steadiness of mind and acceptance of consequences; true strength is shown in resolve and self-restraint rather than in skill at vice.
The narrator Vaiśampāyana describes the king’s state after the dice episode: despite being adept at dice, he is now firm and mentally detached, and he is destined to return to forest-dwelling—signaling the continuation of exile in the Vana Parva storyline.