Adhyaya 70 — The King Confronts the Rakshasa and Restores the Brahmin’s Wife
दृष्टमात्रे ततस्तस्मिन् त्वरमाणः स राक्षसः ।
दूरादेव महीं मूर्ध्ना स्पृशन् पादान्तिकं ययौ ॥
dṛṣṭamātre tatas tasmin tvaramāṇaḥ sa rākṣasaḥ | dūrād eva mahīṃ mūrdhnā spṛśan pādāntikaṃ yayau ||
அவரைக் கண்ட அந்தக் கணமே ராட்சசன் விரைந்து வந்தான்; தூரத்திலிருந்தே தலையால் நிலத்தைத் தொட்டு அரசனின் பாதங்களின் அருகே சென்றடைந்தான்।
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Unchecked power often yields only to a higher countervailing power. The verse underscores why rājadharma includes danda: deterrence protects the innocent when mere appeals fail.
Narrative (ākhyāna) illustrating dharma through the dynamics of authority.
The bowing head symbolizes ego’s collapse before rightful order. When buddhi/authority is present, destructive impulses can be compelled into restraint—though the sincerity of such restraint is still to be tested.