Jaitrya-nimitta: Signs of Prospective Victory and the Priority of Conciliation (जयलक्षण-निमित्त तथा सान्त्व-प्रधान नीति)
मन्यते कर्षयित्वा तु क्षमा साध्वीति शम्बर: । असंतप्तं तु यद् दारु प्रत्येति प्रकृति पुन:
manyate karṣayitvā tu kṣamā sādhvīti śambaraḥ | asaṃtaptaṃ tu yad dāru pratyeti prakṛtiṃ punaḥ ||
Wika ni Bhīṣma: “Ayon kay Śambara, ang pagpapatawad ay nararapat lamang matapos munang pahinain ang kaaway sa pamamagitan ng pagdurusa. Sapagkat ang baluktot na kahoy, kapag itinuwid nang hindi pinapainit, ay babalik din sa dati nitong anyo.”
भीष्म उवाच
Forgiveness (kṣamā) is portrayed—according to Śambara’s view—as effective only after the wrongdoer has been sufficiently checked or chastened; otherwise, like unheated wood forced straight, the person may revert to former harmful tendencies.
Bhīṣma, while instructing on dharma in the Śānti Parva, cites Śambara’s opinion and illustrates it with a practical metaphor: straightening wood requires heating, just as reforming an adversary may require prior restraint or suffering before mercy can hold.