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Shloka 48

नियोगप्रसङ्गः — The Niyoga Episode: Births of Dhṛtarāṣṭra, Pāṇḍu, and Vidura

शान्तनुश्वापि शोकार्तो जगाम स्वपुरं तत:ः । तस्याहं कीर्तयिष्यामि शान्तनोरधिकान्‌ गुणान्‌,इधर शान्तनु शोकसे आतुर हो पुनः अपने नगरको लौट गये। शान्तनुके उत्तम गुणोंका मैं आगे चलकर वर्णन करूँगा

Śāntanuś cāpi śokārto jagāma svapuraṃ tataḥ | tasyāhaṃ kīrtayiṣyāmi Śāntanor adhikān guṇān ||

ครั้นแล้วศานตนุก็โศกเศร้าอาดูร กลับไปยังนครของตน ต่อไปภายหน้าเราจักกล่าวพรรณนาคุณธรรมอันยิ่งใหญ่ของศานตนุ

{'Śāntanuḥ''King Śāntanu (a Kuru ruler)', 'ca api': 'and also, moreover', 'śoka-ārtaḥ': 'afflicted by sorrow
{'Śāntanuḥ':
distressed with grief', 'jagāma''went
distressed with grief', 'jagāma':
departed', 'svapuram''to his own city/capital', 'tataḥ': 'then
departed', 'svapuram':
thereafter', 'tasya''of him
thereafter', 'tasya':
his', 'aham''I', 'kīrtayiṣyāmi': 'I shall proclaim/describe
his', 'aham':
I will narrate', 'adhikān''superior, outstanding, exceptional', 'guṇān': 'qualities, virtues, merits'}
I will narrate', 'adhikān':

वैशम्पायन उवाच

V
Vaiśampāyana
Ś
Śāntanu
S
svapura (his own city/capital)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights how even a powerful king is not beyond sorrow, and it signals that true evaluation of a ruler rests on guṇas (virtues). It also models ethical narration: the speaker promises a measured account of Śāntanu’s merits rather than dwelling only on tragedy.

After the preceding events that cause him grief, Śāntanu, overwhelmed by sorrow, returns to his capital. The narrator Vaiśampāyana then foreshadows a forthcoming description of Śāntanu’s outstanding qualities.