Bharata’s Attachment and the Palanquin Teaching on ‘I’ and ‘Mine’
त्वं राजा शिबिका चेयं वयं वाहाः पुरः सराः । अयं च भवतो लोको न सदेतन्नृपोच्यते ॥ ८३ ॥
tvaṃ rājā śibikā ceyaṃ vayaṃ vāhāḥ puraḥ sarāḥ | ayaṃ ca bhavato loko na sadetannṛpocyate || 83 ||
「汝は王、これは輿(こし)、我らは先に進みて担う者。しかし汝の『王たること』は真実に実在するものではない。ゆえに最高義において汝は王と呼ばれぬ。」
Unspecified (didactic dialogue within Moksha-dharma context; likely a wise instructor addressing a ruler)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It dismantles ego based on social role—“king” is a convention sustained by attendants and symbols, not an ultimate reality—pointing the seeker toward truth (sat) and self-knowledge rather than status.
By exposing the fragility of worldly identity, it encourages humility and surrender—key foundations for Vishnu-bhakti—where one’s real refuge is the Lord, not power, titles, or public honor.
Primarily Vyākaraṇa/semantic discernment: the verse distinguishes between a mere label (“nṛpa/king” as a word used in society) and what is truly ‘sat’—a practical lesson in precise meaning and right understanding.