Adhyaya 27 — Madālasa’s Instruction to King Alarka: Royal Ethics, Self-Conquest, and Statecraft
मारुतः सर्वभूतेषु निगूढश्चरते यथा ।
एवं नृपश्चरेच्चारैः पौरामात्यादिबन्धुषु ॥
mārutaḥ sarvabhūteṣu nigūḍhaś carate yathā / evaṃ nṛpaś carec cāraiḥ paurāmātyādibandhuṣu
Gaya ng hangin na lihim na gumagalaw sa gitna ng lahat ng nilalang, gayon din ang hari ay dapat kumilos sa pamamagitan ng mga espiya sa mga taga-lungsod, mga ministro, at maging sa mga kamag-anak at mga kasamahan.
{ "primaryRasa": "dharma", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Governance requires unobtrusive vigilance: the ruler should know conditions in every social layer (citizens, ministers, even kin) without becoming oppressive; knowledge is protection when used for dharma.
Primarily Dharma/Ācāra material rather than the five cosmological markers; it aligns loosely with Vaṃśānucarita insofar as it teaches ideal royal conduct within dynastic narratives.
The 'wind' metaphor suggests a subtle, all-pervading awareness: the king’s discerning intelligence should be present everywhere yet remain unseen, avoiding egoic display while sustaining order.