Adhyaya 26 — Madālasa Names Alarka and Reorients Him Toward Kshatriya Duty
बालो मनो नन्दय बान्धवानां गुरोस्तथाज्ञाकरनैः कुमारः ।
स्त्रीणां युवा सत्कुलभूषणानां वृद्धो वने वत्स ! वनॆचराणाम् ॥
bālo mano nandaya bāndhavānāṃ guros tathājñākaraṇaiḥ kumāraḥ | strīṇāṃ yuvā satkulabhūṣaṇānāṃ vṛddho vane vatsa! vanecarāṇām ||
幼き時は親族の心を喜ばせよ。若き時、学生として師の命に従え。壮年には、高貴なる家々のふさわしき飾りとなり(また女性にとって正しき伴侶となれ)。そして老いに至れば、わが子よ、林住の人々とともに森に住め。
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "dharma", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Dharma is time-sensitive: each stage of life has a distinct excellence—affectionate family integration in childhood, discipline under the guru in youth, social responsibility in adulthood, and renunciation/withdrawal in old age.
Didactic dharma content within narrative; indirectly supports vaṃśānucarita by prescribing how a ruler (or noble) matures ethically across stages.
The ‘forest’ is also an inner state: as senses age, one should ‘move inward.’ The verse encodes a gradual turning from external validation (kin, teacher, society) toward inner solitude and liberation.