गोप्रदानगुणाः तथा कपिलागोविधानम्
Merits of Cow-Gift and the Origin-Account of Kapilā Cows
अक्रोधनो गोषु तथा द्विजेषु धर्मे रतो गुरुशुश्रूषकश्न । यावज्जीवं सत्यवृत्ते रतश्न दाने रतो य: क्षमी चापराधे
pitāmaha uvāca | akrodhano goṣu tathā dvijeṣu dharme rato guruśuśrūṣakaś ca | yāvajjīvaṃ satyavr̥tte rataś ca dāne rato yaḥ kṣamī cāparādhe |
Bhīṣma disse: “Aquele que está livre de ira para com as vacas e para com os ‘duas-vezes-nascidos’ (dvija), devotado ao dharma e atento no serviço aos mais velhos e aos mestres; que, por toda a vida, se deleita numa conduta veraz; que se dedica à dádiva e perdoa mesmo quando ofendido—tal pessoa, dotada dessas virtudes, alcança o reino eterno e imperecível do Senhor, Goloka.”
पितामह उवाच
Bhishma teaches that a dharmic life is defined by disciplined non-anger (especially toward protected beings like cows and revered communities like Brahmins), lifelong truthfulness, service to elders/teachers, generosity, and forgiveness; these virtues are presented as the cause of attaining an imperishable divine realm.
In Anushasana Parva, Bhishma (lying on the bed of arrows) instructs Yudhishthira on dharma. Here he lists specific ethical qualities—non-anger, truth, guru-service, charity, and forgiveness—and links them to the spiritual fruit of reaching an eternal abode (Goloka in the broader passage).