Adhyāya 2: Nārada’s Disclosure—Karṇa’s Training and the Brahmin’s Curse (Śānti-parva)
सम: शिष्येषु व: स्नेह: पुत्रे चैव तथा ध्रुवम् त्वत्प्रसादान्न मां ब्रूयुकृतास्त्रं विचक्षणा:
samaḥ śiṣyeṣu vaḥ snehaḥ putre caiva tathā dhruvam | tvatprasādān na māṃ brūyur kṛtāstraṃ vicakṣaṇāḥ ||
Nārada disse: “Teu afeto é imparcial para com teus discípulos, e igualmente firme para com teu filho. Pela tua graça, que os prudentes não digam de mim que sou inexperiente no uso das armas. Busco conhecer o Brahmāstra, com o segredo de sua liberação e de sua retirada, pois desejo enfrentar Arjuna em batalha.”
नारद उवाच
The verse foregrounds the ethical ideal of a teacher’s impartiality (sama-sneha) toward disciples and family, and frames advanced knowledge (like the Brahmāstra) as something sought through the guru’s grace and proper initiation—so that one’s competence is grounded in legitimate transmission rather than mere ambition or reputation.
Nārada addresses his teacher respectfully, appealing to the guru’s equal affection for all students and for his own son. He requests instruction in the Brahmāstra, specifically including the crucial method of both deploying and retracting it, motivated by a desire to face Arjuna in combat and to avoid being regarded by the wise as untrained in astras.