Characteristics of the King and His Servants
Rāja-dharma, Nīti, and Ethical Revenue
हुङ्कारे भृकुटीं नैव सदा कुर्वीत पार्थिवः / विना दोषेण यो भृत्यान्राजाधमण शास्ति च / लीलासुखानि भोग्यानि त्यजेदिह महीपतिः
huṅkāre bhṛkuṭīṃ naiva sadā kurvīta pārthivaḥ / vinā doṣeṇa yo bhṛtyānrājādhamaṇa śāsti ca / līlāsukhāni bhogyāni tyajediha mahīpatiḥ
بادشاہ کو ہر وقت دھمکی اور تیوری چڑھانا مناسب نہیں۔ جو بے قصور خادموں کو سزا دے وہ بدترین بادشاہ ہے؛ ایسا حاکم اسی دنیا میں کھیل تماشے کے سکھ اور لذتیں ترک کرے۔
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra, within the Garuda Purana discourse)
Concept: अदोषे दण्डनिषेधः; राज्ञः क्रोध-भ्रूकुटि-हुङ्कारादि त्यक्त्वा न्यायेन शासनम्, अन्यथा भोगत्याग-प्रायश्चित्तभावः।
Vedantic Theme: कर्तृत्व-अहंकार-त्यागः; धर्माधर्मफल-नियमः (कर्मफल-न्याय)
Application: Leaders should avoid intimidation as a default, investigate fault before punishment, and adopt visible restraint (reduced indulgence, accountability) when governance becomes unjust.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: court/palace
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (Dharma/ācāra sections): राजधर्म, दण्डनीति, क्रोधनिग्रह themes (general parallel)
This verse stresses that authority must be exercised with restraint: punishing without proven fault is adharma and marks a ruler as a “lowest king,” bringing moral and karmic decline.
Indirectly, it points to karma: unjust cruelty by those in power becomes a serious ethical transgression that shapes future suffering, even if the verse focuses on consequences in this life.
Leaders and managers should avoid intimidation and punitive action without clear evidence; fair process and proportional response are essential for dharmic governance.