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Shloka 86

Udyoga-parva Adhyāya 71 — Kṣatra-dharma Counsel, Public Legitimacy, and Mobilization

न चापि मम पर्याप्ता: सहिता: सर्वपार्थिवा: । क्रुद्धस्य संयुगे स्थातुं सिंहस्येवेतरे मृगा:

na cāpi mama paryāptāḥ sahitāḥ sarvapārthivāḥ | kruddhasya saṃyuge sthātuṃ siṃhasyevetare mṛgāḥ ||

Wika ni Yudhiṣṭhira: “Kahit magsama-sama pa ang lahat ng hari sa daigdig, hindi pa rin sila sasapat upang tumindig laban sa akin sa digmaan kapag ako’y nagngangalit—gaya ng ibang hayop na hindi makapananatili sa harap ng leon na nag-aalab ang poot.”

{'na ca api''and not even', 'mama': 'of me
{'na ca api':
for me', 'paryāptāḥ''sufficient
for me', 'paryāptāḥ':
able to match', 'sahitāḥ''together
able to match', 'sahitāḥ':
in alliance', 'sarva-pārthivāḥ''all kings
in alliance', 'sarva-pārthivāḥ':
all rulers of the earth', 'kruddhasya''of one who is enraged
all rulers of the earth', 'kruddhasya':
of the angry (person)', 'saṃyuge''in battle
of the angry (person)', 'saṃyuge':
in armed conflict', 'sthātum''to stand
in armed conflict', 'sthātum':
to face', 'siṃhasya''of a lion', 'iva': 'like
to face', 'siṃhasya':
as', 'itare''other
as', 'itare':
the rest', 'mṛgāḥ''animals
the rest', 'mṛgāḥ':

युधिछिर उवाच

Y
Yudhiṣṭhira
S
sarvapārthivāḥ (all kings)
S
siṃha (lion)
M
mṛgāḥ (other animals)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights the overwhelming force of a warrior’s wrath and authority, using the lion metaphor to convey unmatched dominance; ethically, it also implies that such power must be governed by dharma and restraint, since anger is potent but dangerous.

Yudhiṣṭhira speaks assertively about his capacity in battle: if provoked to anger, even a coalition of kings could not withstand him—framing his strength as a deterrent and emphasizing the seriousness of pushing a dharmic ruler toward wrath.