Śama-prāptiḥ — Gautamī–Lubdhaka–Pannaga–Mṛtyu–Kāla-saṃvāda
Restraint through the Analysis of Karma and Time
शमार्थिन: कालगतिं वदन्ति सद्यः शुचं त्वर्थविदस्त्यजन्ति । श्रेय:क्षयं शोचति नित्यमोहात् तस्माच्छुचं मुज्च हते भुजड़े
śamārthinaḥ kālagatiṁ vadanti sadyaḥ śucaṁ tv arthavidās tyajanti | śreyaḥkṣayaṁ śocati nityamohāt tasmāc chucaṁ muñca hate bhujaṅge ||
Disse o caçador: “Os que buscam a paz explicam os acontecimentos como o curso do Tempo e, assim, abandonam de pronto o luto. Os hábeis nos fins práticos—os que sabem assegurar o próprio intento—lançam fora a tristeza imediatamente após destruir o inimigo. Outros, por constante ilusão, continuam a lamentar quando seu bem-estar se perde. Portanto, agora que esta serpente inimiga foi abatida, abandona tu também, sem demora, o teu pesar por teu filho.”
लुब्धक उवाच
Grief should be relinquished by recognizing either (a) the inevitability of Time’s course, which brings loss beyond personal control, or (b) the completion of necessary action—once the hostile cause is removed, continued lament is seen as delusion. The verse contrasts peace-seekers who accept Kāla with pragmatists who move on after achieving their aim, urging immediate release from sorrow.
The hunter addresses a grieving person (mourning a son) and argues that since the enemy-serpent has been killed, the occasion for ongoing sorrow has ended. He offers two models of coping—acceptance of Time and practical resolution—then exhorts the listener to abandon lamentation at once.