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Shloka 49

Mantri-Parīkṣā — Testing Ministers, Securing Counsel, and Ethical Criteria for Advisers (अध्याय ८४)

नास्य च्छिद्रं पर: पश्येच्छिद्रेषु परमन्वियात्‌ । गूहेत्‌ कूर्म इवाड्रानि रक्षेद्‌ विवरमात्मन:,राजा ऐसा प्रयत्न करे कि उसका छिढद्र शत्रु न देख सके; परंतु वह शत्रुकी सारी दुर्बलताओंको जान ले। जैसे कछुआ अपने सब अड़ोंको समेटे रहता है, उसी तरह राजाको भी अपने गुप्त विचारों तथा छिद्रोंको छिपाये रखना चाहिये

bhīṣma uvāca |

nāsya chidraṃ paraḥ paśyec chidreṣu param anviyāt |

gūhet kūrma ivāṅgāni rakṣed vivaram ātmanaḥ ||

भीष्म म्हणाले—राजा असा प्रयत्न करावा की शत्रूला त्याचे छिद्र (दुर्बलता) दिसू नये; पण त्याने शत्रूची सर्व दुर्बल ठिकाणे बारकाईने शोधावीत. जसा कासव आपले अवयव आत ओढून घेतो, तसा राजा आपल्या गुप्त विचारांना आणि आपल्या संरक्षणातील उघड्या जागांना लपवून जपावा.

{'na''not', 'asya': 'of him
{'na':
his (i.e., the king’s)', 'chidram''a flaw, vulnerability, weak point
his (i.e., the king’s)', 'chidram':
an opening', 'paraḥ''the other
an opening', 'paraḥ':
an enemy, opponent', 'paśyet''should see, should perceive', 'chidreṣu': 'in the vulnerabilities/weak points (locative plural)', 'param': 'the enemy (as ‘the other’)
an enemy, opponent', 'paśyet':
also ‘supreme/utter’ depending on context', 'anviyāt (anu-√i)''should follow up, investigate, track closely', 'gūhet (√guh)': 'should conceal, hide', 'kūrmaḥ': 'tortoise', 'iva': 'like, as', 'aṅgāni': 'limbs, members (of the body)', 'rakṣet (√rakṣ)': 'should protect, guard', 'vivaram': 'an opening, gap, loophole', 'ātmanaḥ': 'of oneself
also ‘supreme/utter’ depending on context', 'anviyāt (anu-√i)':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhīṣma
R
rājā (the king)
P
paraḥ (enemy)
K
kūrma (tortoise)

Educational Q&A

A ruler must practice strategic self-guarding: conceal one’s own weaknesses and confidential plans, while diligently identifying the opponent’s vulnerabilities. The tortoise image teaches restraint, containment, and disciplined protection of one’s ‘openings’.

In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on rājadharma, Bhīṣma is advising Yudhiṣṭhira on practical kingship. Here he gives a concise rule of political prudence: do not let enemies detect your weak points; instead, study theirs and keep your counsel protected.