Uttaṅka’s Petition for Madayantī’s Divine Earrings (Maṇikuṇḍala) — Agreement, Proof, and Vigilance
न चान्वबुध्यत तदा स मुनिर्गुरुवत्सल: । ततः कदाचिद् राजेन्द्र काष्ठान्यानयितुं ययौ
na cānvabudhyata tadā sa munir guruvatsalaḥ | tataḥ kadācid rājendra kāṣṭhāny ānayituṃ yayau ||
នៅពេលនោះ មុនីនោះ—អ្នកស្រឡាញ់គ្រូយ៉ាងជ្រាលជ្រៅ—មិនបានដឹងច្បាស់អំពីអ្វីដែលកំពុងកើតឡើងឡើយ។ បន្ទាប់មក ឱ ព្រះមហាក្សត្រល្អឥតខ្ចោះ! មានម្តងមួយ លោកបានចេញទៅយកឈើឆេះ។
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethic of guru-devotion expressed through simple service: the sage’s mind is oriented toward reverence and duty, not suspicion, showing how disciplined loyalty can shape perception and conduct.
Vaiśampāyana says that the guru-devoted sage does not realize something at that moment; later, addressing the king, he notes that the sage goes out to fetch firewood—an action that often marks humble service and sets up the next event in the story.