Gautama’s Flight, the Enchanted Grove, and the Arrival of Rājadharma
Nāḍījaṅgha
उपैति सत्याद् दान॑ हि तथा यज्ञा: सदक्षिणा: । त्रेताग्निहोत्रं वेदाश्न ये चानन््ये धर्मनिश्चया:
upaiti satyād dānaṁ hi tathā yajñāḥ sadakṣiṇāḥ | tretāgnihotraṁ vedāś ca ye cānanye dharmaniścayāḥ ||
ಸತ್ಯದಿಂದಲೇ ಮನುಷ್ಯನು ದಾನದ ಫಲವನ್ನೂ, ದಕ್ಷಿಣೆಯೊಡನೆ ನೆರವೇರಿಸುವ ಯಜ್ಞಗಳ ಫಲವನ್ನೂ, ತ್ರೇತಾಗ್ನಿಗಳಲ್ಲಿ ಹೋಮ ಮಾಡುವ ಫಲವನ್ನೂ, ವೇದಸ್ವಾಧ್ಯಾಯದ ಫಲವನ್ನೂ, ಹಾಗೆಯೇ ಧರ್ಮನಿರ್ಣಯ ಮಾಡುವ ಇತರ ಶಾಸ್ತ್ರಗಳ ಅಧ್ಯಯನಫಲವನ್ನೂ ಪಡೆಯುತ್ತಾನೆ.
भीष्म उवाच
Truthfulness (satya) is taught as a comprehensive virtue whose spiritual fruit equals that of major religious disciplines—charity, properly endowed sacrifices, maintaining the three fires with agnihotra, and study of the Vedas and other dharma-authoritative texts.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on dharma, Bhishma continues advising Yudhishthira by ranking and synthesizing virtues: he emphasizes that inner moral integrity—truth—can yield the same merit people seek through elaborate rituals and extensive scriptural learning.