Udyoga-parva Adhyāya 71 — Kṣatra-dharma Counsel, Public Legitimacy, and Mobilization
ह्वीमानवति देवांश्व॒ पितृनात्मानमेव च । तेनामृतत्वं ब्रजति सा काष्ठा पुण्यकर्मणाम्
hrīmān avati devānś ca pitṝn ātmānam eva ca | tenāmṛtatvaṁ vrajati sā kāṣṭhā puṇyakarmaṇām ||
Юдхиштхира сказал: «Человек, наделённый благим стыдом (hrī), хранит богов, предков (pitṛ) и даже самого себя. Этой добродетелью он достигает бессмертия; такова высшая вершина и верховная цель тех, кто творит праведные дела.»
युधिछिर उवाच
Modesty and moral shame (hrī) function as inner guardianship: they restrain wrongdoing, thereby protecting one’s relationship with the divine order (devas), ancestral obligations (pitṛs), and one’s own integrity. Such self-restraint is presented as the pinnacle of meritorious conduct and a path to enduring spiritual reward (amṛtatva).
In Udyoga Parva’s ethical discussions preceding the great war, Yudhiṣṭhira articulates a dharmic principle: the truly righteous person is characterized by hrī (modesty/shame), and this quality is praised as safeguarding cosmic, ancestral, and personal welfare, culminating in the highest goal for the virtuous.