Āśā-prabhava (आशाप्रभव) — On the Rise and Power of Hope/Expectation
Sumitra Itihāsa Begins
त्वया च महदैद्वर्य प्राप्त परपुरज्जय । किंकरा भ्रातर: सर्वे मित्रसम्बन्धिन: सदा
tvayā ca mahad aiśvaryaṁ prāptaṁ parapurañjaya | kiṅkarā bhrātaraḥ sarve mitrasambandhinaḥ sadā ||
आणि हे शत्रुनगरजयी! तुझ्यामुळेच महान ऐश्वर्य प्राप्त झाले आहे. तुझे सर्व भाऊ, मित्र आणि नातेवाईक सदैव तुझ्या अधीन राहून जणू तुझेच सेवक आहेत.
धृतराष्ट उवाच
The verse highlights how political power (aiśvarya) reshapes social relations: brothers, friends, and kin can become dependents. Ethically, it invites reflection on the responsibilities of sovereignty and the danger of reducing close relations to mere instruments of one’s power.
Dhṛtarāṣṭra addresses a powerful figure as “conqueror of enemy cities,” noting that great sovereignty has been achieved through him, and that the speaker’s wider circle—brothers, friends, and relatives—now stand in a subordinate, attendant-like position.